Toyota Chaser JZX100
Same platform; sportier image; deeper parts pool
Buyer's guide
15 min read
Buyer's guide & specs
Background
The Toyota Cresta ran five generations from 1980 to 2001, sold only through Toyota's Vista Store network in Japan alongside platform siblings Chaser and Mark II. Most export buyers want the X90 or X100 Tourer V — both carry the 1JZ-GTE and offered an optional R154 5-speed manual. The X50/X60 and X70 are the older M- and 1G-series cars; the X80 introduced the 1JZ-GTE. The Cresta was never exported new; under the US 25-year rule, final 2001 X100 cars become federally importable in 2026.
The Cresta, Chaser and Mark II shared the same X-series chassis, engine line-up and gearboxes — each sold through a separate Toyota dealer channel. A GX81 Mark II, a GX81 Chaser and a GX81 Cresta are mechanically identical sedans; sheet metal and trim cues were the only meaningful differences.
From the X80 onward, the 1JZ-GTE arrived in all three platforms. From the X90 onward, the Tourer V trim gave the Cresta R154 manual availability and a credible drift platform in a luxury-sedan body.
The Cresta typically trades at a small discount to the equivalent Chaser despite identical mechanicals — partly styling preference, partly because Tourer V Cresta production volumes were lower.
The X90 Tourer V (October 1992 to September 1996) and the X100 Tourer V (September 1996 to October 2001) are the two trims that set Cresta valuations in the export market. Both ran the 1JZ-GTE 2.5-litre twin-cam inline six, factory-rated at 280 PS — CT12A twin turbos on the X90, single-turbo VVT-i CT15B on the X100. The 2JZ-GE appeared in upper-trim X90 and X100 grades; the 2JZ-GTE never shipped in the Cresta.
Optional equipment on Tourer V included the R154 5-speed manual gearbox, a Torsen limited-slip differential, and a Tourer V-specific aero package. The R154 was rare in the Cresta; most Tourer V cars left Motomachi with the A340E 4-speed automatic.
The 1JZ-GTE tolerates 350–400 hp on stock internals with supporting fuel and cooling work. Buyers comparing JZ sedans are usually choosing between Cresta Tourer V, Chaser Tourer V and Mark II Grande G — the trim suffix matters more than the badge.
Editorial notes
Quick read
Constants
Chassis history
The Cresta had five generations from 1980 until 2001, and the version you want depends on whether you're buying for the badge or the engine. The X50/X60 and X70 are the older 2.0 liter cars that mostly stayed in Japan. The X80 is the bubble era car that introduced the 1JZ-GTE. The X90 and X100 Tourer V are the ones export buyers chase, because that's where the 1JZ-GTE and the optional R154 manual gearbox live.
X80 (GX/JZX81; 1988–1992)
X90 (JZX90; 1992–1996)
Buyer's call
The Cresta is a car where what you get and what you give up have stayed pretty consistent across the whole production run. You get a JDM only luxury sedan body with the same drivetrain as a Chaser Tourer V for less money. You give up parts availability, because the Cresta nameplate never reached export markets and trim pieces are harder to find than on the Mark II or Chaser.
Reliability
The Cresta is mechanically the same car as a Chaser or a Mark II, so the issues are the same too. The 1JZ-GTE is durable on stock boost. The A340E automatic is the part that gives up first on Tourer V cars driven hard. Rust at the rear arches and the trunk well is the single biggest condition concern on any Cresta, and the older the car the worse it gets.
| Issue | Cause | Solution | Est. cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| ECU leaking capacitors | Aging electrolytics leak and corrode PCB | Re-cap ECU, repair traces, clean corrosion | $250-900 |
| A340E auto shift flare | Worn clutches/valve body; old ATF heat damage | Fluid/filter, valve body service, rebuild if bad | $250-3500 |
| Delayed auto engagement | Internal seal shrink, low line pressure cold | ATF service; if persists plan rebuild | $250-3500 |
| Manual trans 2nd gear crunch | Worn synchros from hard shifts/old fluid | Fluid; rebuild or replace gearbox | $150-2500 |
| Rear subframe bush sag | Rubber collapses with age; causes rear steer | Replace subframe bushes; align afterward | $600-1800 |
| Front lower ball joint wear | Age/boot tears; grease loss leads to play | Replace ball joints; inspect arms and knuckles | $250-900 |
| Steering rack leaks | Seal wear; torn boots trap grit and moisture | Rebuild/replace rack; flush PS system | $500-1600 |
| PS pump whine/foam | Suction hose cracks; air ingestion; worn pump | Replace suction/return hoses; rebuild pump | $150-700 |
| Valve cover gasket leaks | Hardened gaskets; PCV restriction raises pressure | Gaskets + grommets; service PCV | $120-450 |
| Cam/crank seal oil leak | Seal hardening; often found during timing belt | Replace seals with timing belt service | $700-1400 |
| Timing belt overdue | Unknown history; age cracks belt and idlers | Full kit: belt, idlers, tensioner, water pump | $700-1600 |
| Radiator plastic tank crack | Heat cycles embrittle OEM plastic end tanks | Replace radiator; new cap; pressure test | $250-700 |
| Cooling system air pockets | Poor bleeding; weak cap; small leaks | Pressure test; bleed properly; replace cap/hoses | $80-500 |
| Heater core leak | Corrosion/age; coolant neglect | Replace heater core; flush system; new coolant | $600-1600 |
| Turbo oil seal smoke | Worn turbo bearings; clogged oil return; high blow-by | Rebuild/replace turbo; fix return/PCV | $700-2500 |
| Boost creep/overboost | Exhaust mods + weak wastegate control | Proper boost control, wastegate service, tune | $200-1200 |
| Misfire under boost | Weak coils, old plugs, cracked igniter/boots | Plugs gapped, coils/boots, inspect igniter | $120-900 |
| Fuel pump weak at load | Aging pump; clogged sock/filter; low voltage | Replace pump + filter; check wiring/relay | $200-700 |
| Injector clog/leak | Old fuel, varnish, degraded seals | Ultrasonic clean/flow test; replace seals | $200-900 |
| O2 sensor slow response | Age/contamination; causes rich/lean and poor mpg | Replace O2; check for exhaust leaks | $120-400 |
| Exhaust manifold crack/leak | Heat cycling; loose hardware; thin cast sections | Replace manifold/gaskets; retorque hardware | $250-1200 |
| Driveshaft center bearing | Rubber support tears; causes thump/vibration | Replace center bearing; balance shaft | $300-900 |
| Diff axle seal leak | Seal wear; vent clog pressurizes housing | Replace seals; clean/replace diff vent | $200-600 |
| Rear wheel bearing noise | Age/water ingress; long storage | Replace bearing/hub; inspect ABS tone ring | $300-900 |
| Brake caliper seizure | Old fluid, torn boots, corrosion on sliders | Rebuild/replace calipers; flush fluid | $300-1200 |
| Warped rotors vibration | Cheap rotors/pads; stuck caliper; heat spots | Quality rotors/pads; fix caliper; bed properly | $250-800 |
| ABS light intermittent | Wheel speed sensor wiring cracks; dirty tone rings | Repair wiring; clean rings; replace sensor if needed | $100-600 |
| Window regulator failure | Dry tracks, worn motor/regulator gears | Regulator/motor; lube tracks; adjust glass | $150-600 |
| Door lock actuator weak | Aging motor and sticky linkages | Replace actuator or motor; clean/lube linkage | $80-350 |
| Cluster backlight failure | Aging bulbs/solder joints; dimmer issues | Replace bulbs/LED; reflow solder; clean contacts | $50-300 |
| AC not cold | Low charge, leaking seals, tired compressor | Leak test, replace seals, recharge; compressor if noisy | $150-1200 |
| Blend door servo clicking | Stripped gears in HVAC servo motors | Replace servo; recalibrate controls | $120-500 |
| Trunk water intrusion | Tail light gaskets, trunk seal, body seam cracks | Replace gaskets/seal; reseal seams; dry interior | $80-500 |
| Sunroof drain overflow | Clogged drains; cracked drain tubes | Clear drains; replace tubes; dry carpets | $80-400 |
| Rust in sills/arches | Moisture traps; prior repairs; salted roads | Proper cut/weld repair; cavity wax; avoid filler | $800-6000 |
| Rear subframe mount rust | Road salt; trapped mud; undercoat hides rot | Structural rust repair; sometimes shell is done | $1500-8000 |
| Aftermarket wiring gremlins | Alarm/AV splices; poor grounds; hacked harness | Remove hacks; restore wiring; add proper relays | $200-2000 |
Market
The Cresta was a JDM-exclusive nameplate — Toyota never sold a Cresta-badged car new in North America, Europe, Australia or any other export market. The platform did reach North America in the form of the Toyota Cressida, which used the same X-series chassis but different body panels, a different trim hierarchy and a single Toyota engine line per generation (no 1JZ-GTE, no Tourer V trim). The Cressida was discontinued in 1992 ahead of the Lexus brand launch; the JDM Cresta carried on through two more generations (X90, X100) that never had any export equivalent. Under the United States 25-year FMVSS exemption, X70 cars became federally importable in 2009-2013, X80 in 2013-2017, X90 in 2017-2021, and X100 production years 2000-2001 reach 25-year eligibility in 2025-2026. Canada uses a 15-year threshold under the RIV, meaning all Cresta generations have been Canada-legal for years. For US buyers, the practical implication is straightforward: every Cresta on the road in the US arrived through grey-market import, and every 1JZ-GTE Cresta Tourer V required compliance with the 25-year rule before customs clearance.
Specs
Every Cresta is rear wheel drive. The early cars used 2.0 liter M and 1G inline sixes. The X80 introduced the 1JZ-GTE twin turbo at the Japanese 280 PS cap. The X90 Tourer V kept the twin turbo CT12A setup. The X100 Tourer V switched to a single turbo CT15B with VVT-i, still rated at 280 PS but with more usable mid range torque. The R154 5-speed manual was optional on Tourer V, and most Tourer V cars left the factory with the A340E 4-speed automatic instead.
| Chassis | Engine | Displacement | Power | Boost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| X60 | 1G-EU | 2.0L | 125PS @ 5400rpm | N/A | SOHC I6, EFI (market/year dependent) |
| X60 | 4M-EU | 2.6L | 145PS @ 5200rpm | N/A | SOHC I6, EFI |
| X60 | 5M-EU | 2.8L | 175PS @ 5600rpm | N/A | SOHC I6, EFI |
| X70 | 1G-EU | 2.0L | 130PS @ 5400rpm | N/A | SOHC I6, EFI |
| X70 | 1G-GEU | 2.0L | 140PS @ 6400rpm | N/A | DOHC 24V I6, EFI |
| X70 | 1G-GTEU | 2.0L | 185PS @ 6200rpm | 8.7 psi | Single turbo, air-to-air IC (spec dep.) |
| X70 | 5M-GEU | 2.8L | 200PS @ 5600rpm | N/A | DOHC 24V I6, EFI |
| X70 | 2L | 2.4L | 85PS @ 4200rpm | N/A | Diesel I4, NA |
| X70 | 2L-T | 2.4L | 97PS @ 4000rpm | Turbo | Diesel I4 turbo (boost varies by spec) |
| X80 | 1G-FE | 2.0L | 135PS @ 5600rpm | N/A | DOHC 24V I6, EFI |
| X80 | 1G-GZE | 2.0L | 170PS @ 6000rpm | Supercharged | SC I6, roots-type (boost spec dep.) |
| X80 | 1G-GTE | 2.0L | 210PS @ 6200rpm | Turbo | Twin turbo (early), boost spec varies |
| X80 | 1JZ-GE | 2.5L | 180PS @ 6000rpm | N/A | DOHC I6, early non-VVT-i |
| X80 | 1JZ-GTE | 2.5L | 280PS @ 6200rpm | 11.6 psi | Twin turbo, JDM gentleman's agreement |
| X80 | 7M-GE | 3.0L | 200PS @ 5600rpm | N/A | DOHC I6, EFI |
| X80 | 2L | 2.4L | 85PS @ 4200rpm | N/A | Diesel I4, NA |
| X80 | 2L-T | 2.4L | 97PS @ 4000rpm | Turbo | Diesel I4 turbo (boost varies by spec) |
| X90 | 1G-FE | 2.0L | 140PS @ 5600rpm | N/A | DOHC I6, EFI |
| X90 | 1JZ-GE | 2.5L | 180PS @ 6000rpm | N/A | DOHC I6, non-VVT-i (early) |
| X90 | 1JZ-GTE | 2.5L | 280PS @ 6200rpm | 11.6 psi | Twin turbo, CT12A (early spec) |
| X90 | 2JZ-GE | 3.0L | 220PS @ 5800rpm | N/A | DOHC I6, non-VVT-i (early) |
| X90 | 2L-TE | 2.4L | 97PS @ 3800rpm | Turbo | Diesel I4 turbo, EFI |
| X100 | 1G-FE | 2.0L | 140PS @ 5600rpm | N/A | DOHC I6, EFI |
| X100 | 1JZ-GE | 2.5L | 200PS @ 6000rpm | N/A | VVT-i (late), output varies by year |
| X100 | 1JZ-GTE | 2.5L | 280PS @ 6200rpm | 11.6 psi | VVT-i (late), CT15B single turbo |
| X100 | 2JZ-GE | 3.0L | 220PS @ 5800rpm | N/A | DOHC I6, non-turbo |
| X100 | 2L-TE | 2.4L | 97PS @ 3800rpm | Turbo | Diesel I4 turbo, EFI |
| Type | Ratios | Availability | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5-speed Manual (R154) | 3.251/1.955/1.310/1.000/0.753 | X90/X100 Tourer V (some years) | Strong JZ turbo gearbox |
| 5-speed Manual (W58) | 3.285/1.894/1.275/1.000/0.783 | NA trims (limited availability) | Common NA JZ/GE applications |
| 4-speed Automatic (A340E) | 2.804/1.531/1.000/0.705 | Most X80/X90/X100 trims | Electronically controlled 4AT |
| 4-speed Automatic (A341E) | 2.804/1.531/1.000/0.705 | Turbo JZ trims (some years) | Higher torque rating vs A340E |
| 4-speed Automatic (A43DE/A43DL) | 2.804/1.531/1.000/0.705 | X70/X80 non-turbo (varies) | Early ECT variants by engine |
| 5-speed Manual (various early) | 3.769/2.045/1.376/1.000/0.851 | X60/X70/X80 base (market/year dep.) | Early Toyota 5MT family (spec varies) |
Lineup
JDM Cresta trims ran from base Deluxe and Super Deluxe through Lucent and Super Lucent at the luxury end, and on the X90 and X100 the Tourer, Tourer S, and Tourer V at the performance end. The Tourer V is the one to know. It's the 1JZ-GTE car with the optional R154 manual and the optional Torsen limited slip diff. Everything else is a luxury trim that shares its engine with the Mark II Grande or the Chaser Avante.
| Generation | Trim | Engine | Key features |
|---|---|---|---|
| X60 (1st gen, 1980-1984) | Super Lucent | 4M-EU/5M-EU/1G-EU | Top luxury, velour, power options, premium audio |
| X60 (1st gen, 1980-1984) | Lucent | 4M-EU/1G-EU | Mid luxury, upgraded interior, power steering |
| X60 (1st gen, 1980-1984) | Super Deluxe | 1G-EU/4M-EU | Value trim, cloth, basic audio, steel wheels |
| X60 (1st gen, 1980-1984) | Deluxe | 1G-EU | Base trim, minimal equipment, bench/cloth spec |
| X70 (2nd gen, 1984-1988) | Super Lucent | 1G-GEU/1G-GTEU/5M-GEU/2L-T | Top luxury, digital cluster opt, velour, alloys |
| X70 (2nd gen, 1984-1988) | Lucent | 1G-EU/1G-GEU/2L/2L-T | Mid luxury, power options, upgraded trim |
| X70 (2nd gen, 1984-1988) | Super Deluxe | 1G-EU/2L | Value trim, cloth, basic audio, steel wheels |
| X70 (2nd gen, 1984-1988) | Deluxe | 1G-EU/2L | Base trim, minimal equipment, fleet-oriented |
| X80 (3rd gen, 1988-1992) | Super Lucent | 1G-GZE/1G-GTE/1JZ-GE/7M-GE/2L-T | Top luxury, TEMS opt, velour, premium audio |
| X80 (3rd gen, 1988-1992) | Super Lucent G | 1JZ-GE/7M-GE | Luxury+sport, alloys, higher equipment, options |
| X80 (3rd gen, 1988-1992) | GT Twin Turbo | 1JZ-GTE | Twin turbo, sport suspension, rear spoiler opt |
| X80 (3rd gen, 1988-1992) | Lucent | 1G-FE/1JZ-GE/2L/2L-T | Mid luxury, power options, upgraded interior |
| X80 (3rd gen, 1988-1992) | Super Deluxe | 1G-FE/2L | Value trim, cloth, steel wheels, basic audio |
| X90 (4th gen, 1992-1996) | Super Lucent | 1JZ-GE/1JZ-GTE/2JZ-GE/2L-TE | Top luxury, airbags opt, premium trim, alloys |
| X90 (4th gen, 1992-1996) | Super Lucent G | 1JZ-GE/2JZ-GE | Luxury+sport, higher equipment, alloys, options |
| X90 (4th gen, 1992-1996) | Tourer V | 1JZ-GTE | Twin turbo, LSD opt, sport seats, aero opt |
| X90 (4th gen, 1992-1996) | Tourer S | 1JZ-GE | Sport trim, firmer suspension, sport interior |
| X90 (4th gen, 1992-1996) | Tourer | 1JZ-GE | Sport-oriented, alloys, upgraded suspension |
| X90 (4th gen, 1992-1996) | Lucent | 1G-FE/1JZ-GE/2L-TE | Mid luxury, power options, upgraded interior |
| X90 (4th gen, 1992-1996) | Super Deluxe | 1G-FE/2L-TE | Value trim, cloth, basic audio, steel wheels |
| X100 (5th gen, 1996-2001) | Exceed | 1JZ-GE/2JZ-GE/1G-FE/2L-TE | Luxury focus, wood trim, higher equipment, alloys |
| X100 (5th gen, 1996-2001) | Super Lucent | 1JZ-GE/2JZ-GE/1G-FE | Upper luxury, premium interior, power options |
| X100 (5th gen, 1996-2001) | Tourer V | 1JZ-GTE | Twin turbo, 5MT opt, LSD opt, sport suspension |
| X100 (5th gen, 1996-2001) | Tourer S | 1JZ-GE | Sport trim, firmer suspension, sport interior |
| X100 (5th gen, 1996-2001) | Tourer | 1JZ-GE | Sport-oriented, alloys, upgraded suspension |
| X100 (5th gen, 1996-2001) | Roulant | 1G-FE/1JZ-GE | Special edition, unique trim, equipment package |
| X100 (5th gen, 1996-2001) | Lucent | 1G-FE/1JZ-GE | Mid luxury, power options, upgraded interior |
| X100 (5th gen, 1996-2001) | Super Deluxe | 1G-FE/2L-TE | Value trim, cloth, basic audio, steel wheels |
Pricing
Cresta pricing is mostly about Tourer V or not Tourer V. Clean stock X90 and X100 Tourer V cars sit at the top of the market because they're the closest thing to a JZX100 Chaser Tourer V at a small discount. Rough drift cars stay cheap, but the cost to bring one back to stock usually exceeds what you saved on the purchase. Earlier generations are inexpensive but parts hunts.
Original MSRP: JPY0 at launch in 1980. Toyota did not publish a single launch MSRP for the Cresta — JDM pricing was set per trim grade and revised annually through Vista Store dealers. The WP source does not cite a launch price, and no consolidated yen MSRP table for the X50/X60 has been independently verified for this entry. Period buyers' guides report the Cresta was positioned as a price-laddered tier between Mark II and Crown across all five generations.
Today's market range: $7,000 to $45,000 (median ~$19,000). Source: JDMBUYSELL / USS Auction.
Demand tracks JZX drift/VIP culture: clean, stock-ish JZX90/100 rise; rough drift cars stagnate. Manuals and rust-free bodies command big premiums. Expect steady gains for top-condition cars as supply tightens.
Inspect
Walk this list with the seller, not in front of them. The Critical items are walk away points if there's no paperwork. The High items can usually be priced into the deal. On a Tourer V, verify the gearbox column on the auction sheet before anything else. A manual swap with a hacked harness is a different car than a factory R154.
Cross-shop
If the Cresta isn't right, the natural alternatives are the Chaser Tourer V or the Mark II Tourer V, which are the same car under different sheet metal. The Toyota Cressida is the export version with no 1JZ-GTE option and easier US parts. The Nissan Laurel C35 or Skyline R33 sedan are the closest Nissan equivalents.
Same platform; sportier image; deeper parts pool
Closest sibling; often better availability than Cresta
RWD sedan rival; RB25DET options; VIP/drift friendly
2JZ-GTE luxury sedan; heavier but very fast potential
Compare
Among the JDM 1JZ-GTE sedans, the Cresta is the value pick, the Chaser is the popular pick, and the Mark II is the conservative pick. The table below leans toward where the Cresta wins, which is mostly on price for an identical drivetrain. The Nissan Laurel and Skyline four door comparisons are useful but the Cresta's closest rival is its own platform sibling.
| Feature | Toyota Cresta | Nissan Silvia S14 | Nissan Laurel C35 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Layout/segment | RWD luxury-sport sedan | RWD sport coupe | RWD sport sedan |
| Core appeal | JZ power + VIP comfort | Lightweight drift platform | RB power + sedan drift |
| Typical engines | 1JZ/2JZ, 1G, NA options | SR20DET/NA | RB20/25DET, NA options |
| Turbo flagship | 1JZ-GTE (trim dependent) | SR20DET | RB25DET (trim dependent) |
| Transmission | A/T common; M/T rare | M/T common | A/T common; M/T rarer |
| Chassis feel | Stable, refined, heavier | Nimble, lighter, twitchier | Refined, softer stock tune |
| Aftermarket support | Very strong (JZX ecosystem) | Extremely strong (S-chassis) | Strong but less than S/JZX |
| Drift suitability | Great; needs arms/bushings | Benchmark drift platform | Good; heavier, longer wheelbase |
| VIP build base | Excellent; luxury trim focus | Less luxury; more sport | Excellent; similar VIP culture |
| Parts availability | Good; shared with Mark II family | Good; many reproduction parts | Moderate; some trim scarce |
| Rust risk | Moderate-high (age + Japan use) | Moderate-high (S-chassis) | Moderate (varies by region) |
| Value trajectory | Rising for clean JZX90/100 | High; clean S14 pricey | Rising but behind JZX |
| Buyer pitfall | Bad swaps, hacked wiring, rust | Chassis cracks, drift damage | Cooling, wiring, worn subframes |
Gallery
Editorial
The first question is Tourer V or luxury trim. A Tourer V carries the 1JZ-GTE and holds value accordingly. Non-Tourer V Crestas are inexpensive JDM sedans — worth owning for the experience, not for resale.
The safest starting point is a documented X100 Tourer V, built between 1996 and 2001, with the single-turbo VVT-i 1JZ-GTE. The X100 delivers more usable mid-range torque than the X90, a more modern interior, and electronics that still mostly function on a 25-year-old car. Verify the auction sheet shows a factory R154 if the car is advertised as a manual — most Tourer V cars left Motomachi with the A340E 4-speed automatic, and a swap with hacked wiring is a different car.
If the budget doesn't reach an X100, the X90 Tourer V from 1992 to 1996 is the next stop. Same 1JZ-GTE, CT12A twin-turbo setup in place of the single turbo, same R154 option. More X90 Tourer Vs went through active drift careers during the 2000s and 2010s, so welded differentials, bent rear suspension arms, and overheated A340E units are common findings on cheap X90 listings.
A rough X80 or X90 Tourer V at an attractive price is the one to approach carefully. The 1JZ-GTE itself is generally durable on stock boost, but cooling, fuel, ignition, suspension and rust repair on a neglected 30-year-old JDM sedan can exceed what a documented clean car would have cost. Paying more up front for paperwork and original condition is the lower-cost path in most cases.
FAQ
Citations
Sources last verified:
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