Toyota Aristo JZS161
2JZ-GTE option; more sport-lux, strong tuning
Buyer's guide
15 min read
Buyer's guide & specs
Background
The Toyota Crown has run continuously since the S10 launched in January 1955 — fifteen chassis series, S10 through S230, all but the final two generations built exclusively as right-hand-drive JDM product. Import buyers focus on the S130 through S210: 1JZ-GE and 2JZ-GE inline-sixes through the S170, the 1JZ-GTE turbocharged Athlete V, and V8 Majesta variants running the 1UZ-FE or 3UZ-FE. The S170 (1999–2003) and S180 (2003–2008) are the most-exported generations; the S200 (2008–2012) follows for Canadian buyers under the 15-year rule. S170 cars clear the US 25-year rule from 2024 onward.
Production started in 1955 with the S10, built to a domestic-market brief that required a car capable of serving as both private transport and taxi — the Toyota Automobile Museum documents this origin directly. The model launched alongside the Toyopet Master (taxi-only) and competed domestically with the Prince Skyline from the outset.
By the second generation (S40, 1962–1967), third-party exporters were sending Crowns to the United States. Toyota responded by enlarging engines from the 1.5L R-series to a 1.9L inline-four and offering inline-six options; the JDM market briefly received a 2.6L V8 in the Toyopet Crown G10 (1964–1967).
The Crown never gained traction in North America — too heavy for the engines available at the time, and not engineered around American highway speeds. Toyota turned the model inward, concentrated on Japan and Asia-Pacific markets, and made it the flagship for the domestic dealer network. That decision is why almost every Crown built since the early 1970s is RHD-only and never reached export markets in volume.
From the S130 onward the Crown line split into three sub-lines that share a chassis platform but diverge in almost every other respect. The Royal Saloon and Royal Saloon G targeted chauffeur-driven comfort: electronically controlled air suspension (first offered on the Royal Saloon G in 1987), rear-seat climate and audio controls, and on early high-spec cars a mini-fridge built into the rear console.
The Athlete trim — introduced on the S140 as the Royal Touring, formalized as Athlete on the S170 — shipped with the 1JZ-GE or 2JZ-GE inline-six, stiffer suspension tuning, and four-piston front brakes on later variants. Styling was closer to a Mark II Tourer than a limousine, with body kits on some Athlete trims.
The Majesta, introduced on the S140 and continued through the S210, used a longer wheelbase and the 1UZ-FE or 3UZ-FE V8 — Toyota's chauffeur-spec V8 flagship between the standard Crown and the Century. A 1999 Royal Saloon and a 1999 Majesta share a chassis code but very little else, and buyers should confirm which sub-line they are looking at before making an offer.
Editorial notes
Quick read
Constants
Chassis history
The Crown has run from 1955 to now, which makes it Toyota's longest nameplate by a wide margin. Each generation feels like a different car. Early S10 through S100 cars are pre-war Japanese taxi lineage that almost nobody imports today. The S110 and S120 are the first ones that look like a recognisable Crown. The S130 is the technology jump that became Lexus. The S140 and S150 are inline-six daily drivers. The S170 is the one most US buyers are looking at right now. The S180 onward is when V8 power got pulled out of every trim except the Majesta.
S130 (GS/MS/JZS130; 1987–1991)
S140 (JZS141/LS141/GS141; 1991–1995)
S150 (JZS151/GS151; 1995–1999)
Buyer's call
The Crown was built to be quiet and comfortable, not fast. The pros and the cons are the same across the run. You get great seats, a smooth V6 or V8, and a cabin that's still nicer than most things at the price. You also get 13 to 15 mpg, a 3,500 pound curb weight, and a car that doesn't like being driven hard. If that sounds fine, the Crown is a bargain. If you want a JDM sedan that drifts, look at the Chaser or the Mark II instead.
Reliability
The Crown is reliable in the way old Toyota luxury cars are reliable. The engine and gearbox don't fail. The stuff around them does. Water pumps on the 2GR-FSE, 3GR-FE, and 1UR-FSE V8 are a known weak point on cars built before Toyota fixed it in 2010. Timing belts on the 1JZ and 2JZ stretch before the 60,000 mile interval Toyota lists, so don't trust the sticker. Air suspension on the Royal Saloon G fails with age and the repair bill can outrun the car's value. None of these are deal breakers if the seller has the paperwork.
| Issue | Cause | Solution | Est. cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| VVT-i startup rattle | Worn cam phaser/OCV; low oil pressure at start | Use correct oil; replace VVT gear/OCV if persists | $300-1800 |
| Timing chain noise | Stretched chain or weak tensioner from poor oiling | Replace chain/tensioner/guides; inspect oil pickup | $1200-3500 |
| Valve cover oil leaks | Hardened gaskets; PCV restriction increases pressure | Replace gaskets/PCV; clean breather system | $250-700 |
| Front cover oil seep | Aging FIPG sealant; crank seal wear | Reseal front cover; replace crank seal | $900-2500 |
| Rear main seal leak | Seal wear; crankcase pressure; high mileage | Replace rear main; address PCV; inspect flexplate | $900-2200 |
| Oil consumption | Stuck rings/varnish; long oil intervals | Compression test; piston soak or rebuild if severe | $150-6000 |
| Radiator end tank crack | Aged plastic tanks; heat cycling | Replace radiator cap/hoses; refill with SLLC | $350-900 |
| Water pump seep/noise | Bearing wear; coolant neglect | Replace pump and thermostat; bleed system properly | $450-1100 |
| Overheating in traffic | Weak fans, stuck thermostat, clogged radiator | Diagnose fan control; replace thermostat/radiator | $250-1200 |
| Heater core restriction | Coolant neglect; sediment buildup | Backflush; replace core if flow doesn't recover | $150-1600 |
| A/C weak or warm | Low refrigerant; condenser leak; tired compressor | Leak test; replace condenser/compressor; evac/recharge | $250-1800 |
| Misfire under load | Coil packs/plugs; oil in plug wells from leaks | Plugs/coils; fix valve cover leaks; clear fuel trims | $250-1200 |
| MAF/Vacuum idle hunt | Dirty MAF; cracked intake boot; vacuum leaks | Smoke test; clean/replace MAF; repair hoses/boot | $80-500 |
| P0420 catalyst efficiency | Aged cats; upstream misfire/oil burning damages cat | Fix root cause; replace cats/O2 sensors as needed | $300-2500 |
| O2 sensor failures | Age/heat; wiring fatigue | Replace affected sensor; inspect harness routing | $200-600 |
| Fuel pump weak/hard start | Pump wear; clogged strainer; low tank running | Replace pump/strainer; verify fuel pressure | $350-900 |
| ATF neglect shift issues | Lifetime fluid myth; varnish in valve body | Drain/fill cycles; filter; valve body service if needed | $250-2500 |
| Torque converter shudder | Worn lockup clutch; degraded ATF | ATF exchange; add OE friction modifier; replace TC | $250-2500 |
| Harsh/flare shifting | Solenoid wear; valve body issues; adaptation off | Scan data; service valve body/solenoids; relearn | $400-3000 |
| Diff pinion seal leak | Seal wear; vent clog raises pressure | Replace seal; clean vent; refill correct gear oil | $250-650 |
| Driveshaft vibration | Center bearing wear; U-joint wear; bent shaft | Replace CSB/shaft; check angles and mounts | $350-1400 |
| Lower control arm bush | Rubber cracks; heavy chassis loads | Replace arms or press bushings; align afterward | $400-1400 |
| Ball joint wear/clunk | Boot tears; grease loss; age | Replace joints/arms; torque at ride height | $300-1200 |
| Steering rack leak | Seal wear; torn boots trap grit | Replace/reseal rack; flush fluid; align | $900-2200 |
| Wheel bearing hum | Bearing wear; impacts/potholes | Replace hub/bearing assembly | $300-900 |
| Brake pulsation | Rotor thickness variation; stuck caliper slides | Replace rotors/pads; service calipers and slides | $350-1100 |
| Caliper drag/uneven pads | Seized slide pins; torn boots; corrosion | Rebuild/replace calipers; new hardware and fluid | $250-900 |
| ABS/VSC warning lights | Wheel speed sensor; yaw/steering angle calibration | Scan codes; replace sensor; perform zero-point cal | $150-900 |
| Air suspension sag | Leaking air struts/bags; cracked lines | Leak test; replace struts/lines; consider coil swap | $800-4500 |
| Air compressor runs often | Small leaks or weak compressor/dryer saturation | Fix leaks; replace compressor/dryer; recalibrate | $600-2200 |
| HVAC actuator clicking | Stripped blend door gears; actuator motor wear | Replace actuator; run HVAC calibration | $200-900 |
| Nav/infotainment limits | JDM maps/language; FM band expander hacks | Convert/replace head unit; add CarPlay interface | $200-2000 |
| Cluster pixel/dimming | Aging LCD/backlight; solder joint fatigue | Cluster rebuild or replace; verify mileage legality | $250-900 |
| SmartKey intermittent | Weak fob battery; door handle sensor wear; antennas | New fob battery; diagnose antennas; replace handle | $50-700 |
| Trunk harness breaks | Repeated flex at hinge; insulation cracks | Repair/replace loom; secure strain relief | $120-450 |
| Water intrusion cabin | Sunroof drains/cowl leaks; door vapor barrier failure | Clear drains; reseal cowl/barriers; dry modules | $150-1200 |
| Rust at underbody seams | Japan coastal/snow exposure; poor undercoating | Rust treatment; weld repairs; undercoat properly | $300-6000 |
Market
The Toyota Crown was effectively a JDM-exclusive nameplate from the early 1970s onward. Toyota Motor Sales USA imported small numbers of S40 and S50 coupes, sedans, and wagons in the 1960s — fewer than ten thousand units cumulatively — and then withdrew the Crown from the US lineup. From the S60 (1971) forward, no Crown was sold new in North America. Every Crown imported into the US today reaches the country through one of three paths: a pre-1973 model under existing collector exemptions, a 25-year-rule import (S130 cleared 2012, S140 cleared 2016, S150 cleared 2020, S170 clearing 2024–2028, S180 clearing 2028 onward), or a Show & Display exemption for a documented historically significant variant. Canadian import rules clear the same generations on a 15-year rolling schedule, which is why most Crown imports between 2008 and 2024 went through Canada first. The current S220 and S230 are sold globally in some markets — including a North American return for the S230 sedan/crossover variant in 2023 — but those are modern cars, not the JDM imports this guide focuses on.
Specs
The engine list across the Crown's run is enormous because the car has been built for 70 years. The ones that matter for import buyers are the 1JZ-GE and 2JZ-GE inline-sixes (S130 through S170), the 1JZ-GTE turbocharged six in the S170 Athlete V at around 280 hp, the 1UZ-FE 4.0 V8 from the S130 onward, and the 3UZ-FE 4.3 V8 in the S180 Majesta. Gearboxes went from 4-speed automatic to 5-speed to 6-speed to CVT. Drive is rear-wheel except the Majesta AWD trims.
| Chassis | Engine | Displacement | Power | Boost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S170 (JZS171) | 1JZ-GTE | 2.5L | 280PS @ 6200rpm | Turbo (factory) | Twin-turbo, JDM cap rating |
| S170 (JZS171/JZS175) | 1JZ-FSE | 2.5L | 200PS @ 6000rpm (estimated) | N/A | D-4 direct injection (est.) |
| S170 (JZS173) | 2JZ-GE | 3.0L | 220PS @ 5800rpm (estimated) | N/A | NA I6; figures vary by year (est.) |
| S180 (GRS180) | 4GR-FSE | 2.5L | 215PS @ 6400rpm (estimated) | N/A | Direct injection V6 (est.) |
| S180 (GRS182) | 3GR-FSE | 3.0L | 256PS @ 6200rpm (estimated) | N/A | Direct injection V6 (est.) |
| S180 (GRS184) | 2GR-FSE | 3.5L | 315PS @ 6400rpm (estimated) | N/A | Direct injection V6 (est.) |
| S180/S200 (GWS204) | 2GR-FSE + Hybrid | 3.5L | 345PS system (estimated) | N/A | Hybrid system output (est.) |
| S200 (GRS200) | 4GR-FSE | 2.5L | 203PS @ 6400rpm (estimated) | N/A | V6; output varies by calibration (est.) |
| S200 (GRS202) | 3GR-FSE | 3.0L | 256PS @ 6200rpm (estimated) | N/A | V6; JDM spec (est.) |
| S200 (GRS204) | 2GR-FSE | 3.5L | 315PS @ 6400rpm (estimated) | N/A | V6; JDM spec (est.) |
| S210 (AWS210) | 2AR-FSE + Hybrid | 2.5L | 220PS system (estimated) | N/A | THS II; system output (est.) |
| S210 (GRS210/GRS211) | 4GR-FSE | 2.5L | 203PS @ 6400rpm (estimated) | N/A | V6; output varies by year (est.) |
| S210 (GRS214) | 2GR-FSE | 3.5L | 315PS @ 6400rpm (estimated) | N/A | V6; top non-hybrid (est.) |
| S220 (AZSH20/AZSH21) | A25A-FXS + Hybrid | 2.5L | 226PS system (estimated) | N/A | THS II; system output (est.) |
| S220 (GWS224) | 8GR-FXS + Hybrid | 3.5L | 359PS system (estimated) | N/A | Multi-stage hybrid; system output (est.) |
| S220 (ARS220) | 8AR-FTS | 2.0L | 245PS @ 5200-5800rpm (estimated) | Turbo (factory) | Twin-scroll turbo; output (est.) |
| S230 (AZSH35/AZSH36) | A25A-FXS + Hybrid | 2.5L | 234PS system (estimated) | N/A | Hybrid; AWD via eAxle on E-Four (est.) |
| S230 (TZSH35) | T24A-FTS + Hybrid | 2.4L | 349PS system (estimated) | Turbo (factory) | Dual Boost Hybrid; system output (est.) |
| S230 (FCEV variant) | Fuel Cell (Mirai-based) | N/A | 182PS motor (estimated) | N/A | FCEV; exact motor spec market-dep. (est.) |
| Type | Ratios | Availability | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4-speed Automatic | N/A | Early generations (various) | Multiple Aisin units; ratios vary |
| 5-speed Automatic | N/A | S170 (some trims) | Aisin 5AT; ratios vary by engine |
| 6-speed Automatic | N/A | S180/S200/S210 (V6) | Aisin 6AT; paddle shift on Athlete |
| 8-speed Automatic | N/A | S220 2.0T (some markets) | Aisin 8AT; market/engine dependent |
| e-CVT | N/A | Hybrid trims (S180+) | Power-split device; no fixed ratios |
| Multi Stage Hybrid (e-CVT + 4AT) | N/A | S220 3.5 Hybrid (GWS224) | Hybrid with stepped gearset |
Lineup
The Crown isn't one car. From the S130 onward it splits into three sub-lines that share a chassis code and not much else. The Royal Saloon is the chauffeur-comfort trim, with the air suspension option and the rear-seat features. The Athlete (called Royal Touring on the S140) is the sportier trim with the 1JZ-GTE or 2JZ-GE and firmer suspension. The Majesta is the longer wheelbase V8 flagship, sitting between the standard Crown and the Toyota Century. A 1999 Royal Saloon and a 1999 Majesta are not the same car, and you should know which one you're looking at before you make an offer.
| Generation | Trim | Engine | Key features |
|---|---|---|---|
| S30 (RS30/MS30/GS30, 1955-1962) | Crown Standard | R series I4 | Bench seat, column shift, basic trim |
| S30 (RS30/MS30/GS30, 1955-1962) | Crown Deluxe | R series I4 | Upgraded interior, more brightwork |
| S40 (RS40/MS40, 1962-1967) | Crown Standard | R series I4 | Improved body, basic trim, column shift |
| S40 (RS40/MS40, 1962-1967) | Crown Deluxe | R series I4 | Better interior, additional chrome, heater |
| S50 (RS50/MS50, 1967-1971) | Crown Sedan | R/M series I4/I6 | Sedan body, improved NVH, optional A/C |
| S50 (RS50/MS50, 1967-1971) | Crown Hardtop | M series I6 | Pillarless hardtop, upscale interior |
| S60/S70 (MS60/MS70, 1971-1974) | Crown Sedan | M series I6 | Sedan, optional A/C, improved safety |
| S60/S70 (MS60/MS70, 1971-1974) | Crown Hardtop | M series I6 | Hardtop, higher trim, power options |
| S80/S90/S100 (MS80/MS90, 1974-1979) | Crown Sedan Standard | M series I6 | Sedan, basic trim, column shift |
| S80/S90/S100 (MS80/MS90, 1974-1979) | Crown Sedan Super Saloon | M series I6 | Upgraded interior, power accessories |
| S80/S90/S100 (MS80/MS90, 1974-1979) | Crown Hardtop Royal Saloon | M series I6 | Hardtop, plush trim, premium audio |
| S110 (MS110/GS110, 1979-1983) | Crown Sedan Super Saloon | M/1G series I6 | Sedan, velour, power windows |
| S110 (MS110/GS110, 1979-1983) | Crown Hardtop Royal Saloon | M/1G series I6 | Hardtop, luxury trim, cruise control |
| S120 (MS120/GS120, 1983-1987) | Crown Sedan Super Saloon | 1G/5M series I6 | Sedan, EFI, power accessories |
| S120 (MS120/GS120, 1983-1987) | Crown Hardtop Royal Saloon | 1G/5M series I6 | Hardtop, digital dash (some), plush trim |
| S130 (GS130/MS130/JZS130, 1987-1991) | Crown Sedan Standard | 1G/7M/JZ series | Sedan, fleet spec, bench seat (some) |
| S130 (GS130/MS130/JZS130, 1987-1991) | Crown Sedan Super Saloon | 1G/7M/JZ series | Sedan, power options, upgraded cloth |
| S130 (GS130/MS130/JZS130, 1987-1991) | Crown Hardtop Royal Saloon | 7M/1JZ/2JZ | Hardtop, luxury interior, premium audio |
| S140 (JZS141/LS141/GS141, 1991-1995) | Crown Sedan Super Saloon | 1JZ/2JZ/2L | Sedan, ABS (some), improved crash safety |
| S140 (JZS141/LS141/GS141, 1991-1995) | Crown Sedan Royal Saloon | 1JZ/2JZ | Sedan, higher trim, traction control (some) |
| S140 (JZS141/LS141/GS141, 1991-1995) | Crown Hardtop Royal Saloon | 1JZ/2JZ | Hardtop, plush trim, optional air suspension |
| S150 (JZS151/LS151/GS151, 1995-1999) | Crown Sedan Super Saloon | 1JZ/2JZ/2L | Sedan, dual airbags (some), ABS |
| S150 (JZS151/LS151/GS151, 1995-1999) | Crown Sedan Royal Saloon | 1JZ/2JZ | Sedan, luxury trim, optional air suspension |
| S150 (JZS151/LS151/GS151, 1995-1999) | Crown Majesta (S150) | 1UZ-FE V8 | Separate model line, V8, high luxury |
| S170 (JZS171/JZS173/JZS175, 1999-2003) | Royal (Royal Saloon) | 1JZ-FSE/1JZ-GE/2JZ-GE | Luxury trim, optional air suspension |
| S170 (JZS171/JZS173/JZS175, 1999-2003) | Athlete (Athlete V) | 1JZ-GTE | Turbo, sport suspension, body kit (some) |
| S170 (JZS171/JZS173/JZS175, 1999-2003) | Athlete (Athlete) | 1JZ-GE/1JZ-FSE | Sport trim, firmer suspension, aero (some) |
| S170 (JZS171/JZS173/JZS175, 1999-2003) | Royal Extra / Royal Four | 1JZ-FSE/1JZ-GE | Value luxury, AWD on Royal Four |
| S180 (GRS180/GRS182/GRS184/GWS204, 2003-2008) | Royal Saloon | 4GR-FSE/3GR-FSE | Luxury trim, optional air suspension |
| S180 (GRS180/GRS182/GRS184/GWS204, 2003-2008) | Royal Saloon G | 3GR-FSE/2GR-FSE | Top luxury, leather, premium audio |
| S180 (GRS180/GRS182/GRS184/GWS204, 2003-2008) | Athlete | 4GR-FSE/3GR-FSE | Sport suspension, sport seats, aero (some) |
| S180 (GRS180/GRS182/GRS184/GWS204, 2003-2008) | Athlete G | 2GR-FSE | 3.5L, sport luxury, larger brakes |
| S180 (GRS180/GRS182/GRS184/GWS204, 2003-2008) | Hybrid (Royal/Athlete) | 2GR-FSE + hybrid | Hybrid system, e-CVT, high efficiency |
| S200 (GRS200/GRS202/GRS204/GWS204, 2008-2012) | Royal Saloon | 4GR-FSE/3GR-FSE | Luxury trim, updated safety, HDD nav (some) |
| S200 (GRS200/GRS202/GRS204/GWS204, 2008-2012) | Royal Saloon G | 2GR-FSE | Top luxury, leather, premium audio |
| S200 (GRS200/GRS202/GRS204/GWS204, 2008-2012) | Athlete | 4GR-FSE/3GR-FSE | Sport suspension, sport aero, paddle shift |
| S200 (GRS200/GRS202/GRS204/GWS204, 2008-2012) | Athlete G | 2GR-FSE | 3.5L, sport luxury, larger brakes |
| S200 (GRS200/GRS202/GRS204/GWS204, 2008-2012) | Hybrid | 2GR-FSE + hybrid | Hybrid system, e-CVT, low emissions |
| S210 (AWS210/GRS210/GRS211/GRS214, 2012-2018) | Royal | 2AR-FSE/4GR-FSE/2GR-FSE | Luxury trim, Toyota Safety Sense (late) |
| S210 (AWS210/GRS210/GRS211/GRS214, 2012-2018) | Royal Saloon G | 2GR-FSE | Top luxury, leather, premium audio |
| S210 (AWS210/GRS210/GRS211/GRS214, 2012-2018) | Athlete | 2AR-FSE/4GR-FSE/2GR-FSE | Sport suspension, sport seats, aero |
| S210 (AWS210/GRS210/GRS211/GRS214, 2012-2018) | Athlete G | 2GR-FSE | 3.5L, sport luxury, larger brakes |
| S210 (AWS210/GRS210/GRS211/GRS214, 2012-2018) | Hybrid (Royal/Athlete) | 2AR-FSE + hybrid | Hybrid system, e-CVT, high efficiency |
| S220 (AZSH20/AZSH21/GWS224, 2018-2022) | B | 8AR-FTS/2.5 Hybrid | Base trim, Toyota Safety Sense, LED lamps |
| S220 (AZSH20/AZSH21/GWS224, 2018-2022) | S | 8AR-FTS/2.5 Hybrid | Sport styling, firmer suspension, sport seats |
| S220 (AZSH20/AZSH21/GWS224, 2018-2022) | G | 8AR-FTS/2.5 Hybrid | Luxury trim, upgraded audio, power seats |
| S220 (AZSH20/AZSH21/GWS224, 2018-2022) | G Executive | 2.5 Hybrid | Top luxury, rear comfort pkg, premium audio |
| S220 (AZSH20/AZSH21/GWS224, 2018-2022) | RS | 2.5 Hybrid/3.5 Hybrid | Sport, AVS (some), sport aero |
| S220 (AZSH20/AZSH21/GWS224, 2018-2022) | RS Advance | 3.5 Hybrid | Top sport, AVS, larger brakes |
| S220 (AZSH20/AZSH21/GWS224, 2018-2022) | RS Limited (special) | 3.5 Hybrid | Limited run, unique trim, special wheels |
| S230 (TZSH35/AZSH35/AZSH36, 2022-present) | Crossover X | 2.5 Hybrid | Base, TSS, 19in wheels (market dep.) |
| S230 (TZSH35/AZSH35/AZSH36, 2022-present) | Crossover G | 2.5 Hybrid | Upgraded interior, power seats, more ADAS |
| S230 (TZSH35/AZSH35/AZSH36, 2022-present) | Crossover G Advanced | 2.5 Hybrid | Higher trim, advanced parking, premium audio |
| S230 (TZSH35/AZSH35/AZSH36, 2022-present) | Crossover RS | 2.4T Hybrid (Dual Boost) | Sport, 2.4T hybrid, eAxle AWD |
| S230 (TZSH35/AZSH35/AZSH36, 2022-present) | Sport Z | 2.5 Hybrid | Sport sedan, low roof, TSS, DRS (some) |
| S230 (TZSH35/AZSH35/AZSH36, 2022-present) | Sport RS | 2.4T Hybrid (Dual Boost) | Sport, 2.4T hybrid, AVS (some) |
| S230 (TZSH35/AZSH35/AZSH36, 2022-present) | Sedan Z | 2.5 Hybrid | Formal sedan, rear comfort, TSS |
| S230 (TZSH35/AZSH35/AZSH36, 2022-present) | Sedan Z (FCEV) | Fuel Cell | FCEV, high-pressure H2 tanks, e-motor drive |
| S230 (TZSH35/AZSH35/AZSH36, 2022-present) | Estate Z | 2.5 Hybrid | Wagon, large cargo, TSS |
| S230 (TZSH35/AZSH35/AZSH36, 2022-present) | Estate RS | 2.4T Hybrid (Dual Boost) | Wagon, 2.4T hybrid, eAxle AWD |
Production
The Crown sold steadily in Japan from 1955 through the early 2000s, then declined as the market shifted toward minivans and the Lexus brand picked up the export luxury slot. US sales were never significant. Toyota Motor Sales USA imported small numbers of S40 and S50 coupes and sedans in the 1960s and then withdrew the Crown from the US lineup. Every Crown in North America today either came in through Canada on the 15-year rule or through the US 25-year rule, with the S130 clearing in 2012, the S140 in 2016, the S150 in 2020, and the S170 clearing between 2024 and 2028.
| Year | Domestic | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1955 | 0 | S10 launches January 1955 — Toyota's first passenger-car chassis engineered domestically post-war. |
| 1962 | — | S40 introduced; first inline-six engines; small numbers reach the US via Toyota Motor Sales USA and third-party exporters. |
| 1964 | — | JDM-only 2.6L V8 (Toyopet Crown G10) — first Japanese-domestic-market V8 passenger car. |
| 1971 | — | S60/S70 generation; Crown effectively withdrawn from US new-car market. |
| 1987 | — | S130 introduces electronically controlled air suspension on Royal Saloon G; first JDM application. |
| 1991 | — | S140; carbureted engines discontinued across the Crown line. Royal Touring trim introduced with 1JZ/2JZ options. |
| 1995 | — | S150 launches still using the S130 chassis; LPG variant added for taxi market. |
| 1999 | — | S170 introduces Majesta as a longer-wheelbase V8 sub-line; Crown Estate wagon returns. |
| 2003 | — | S180; inline-six engines retired across most trims (V8 retained for Majesta only); V6-only powertrains for Royal/Athlete. |
| 2008 | — | S200; CVT introduced; first Crown hybrid (3.5L 2GR-FSE). |
| 2012 | — | S210; 2.5L inline-four hybrid and 2.0L turbo (Crown RS) added; 8-speed eCVT. |
| 2018 | — | S220; final pure-JDM Crown sedan generation before the S230 platform shift. |
Pricing
Prices for a usable Crown start around $5,000 for an S140 or S150 with the 1G-FE four-cylinder. Cars with the 1JZ-GE or 2JZ-GE run about $2,000 more. S170 Athlete V cars with the 1JZ-GTE are the priciest of the imports right now because they just cleared the 25-year rule. Late S180 and newer cars retail around $10,000 in Japan. The numbers below cover the today-market range. Documented, original cars sit at the top of the range and rough imports stay cheap until you add up what they actually need.
Today's market range: $6,000 to $55,000 (median ~$18,500). Source: JDMBUYSELL / USS Auction.
Market is bifurcated: older boxy classics rise slowly, while S150–S180 surge as US eligibility expands. Clean, stock Athlete/Majesta and rare wagons command premiums; modified or rusty cars lag. Expect steady gains through 2028 as 2003 models open.
Inspect
The Crown's inspection list is longer than most JDM sedans because the car has 70 years of variants and the V8 cars have more electronics than the inline-six cars. Walk this list with the seller, not in front of him. The Critical items mean walking away if there's no paperwork. The High items can be priced into the deal. A 30 minute drive will surface most of what you need to know about a Crown that's already in your country.
Cross-shop
If the Crown isn't the right car, the closest JDM alternatives are the Toyota Mark II or Chaser if you want the same chassis family in a sportier package, the Nissan Cedric or Gloria if you want a V8 alternative, or the Toyota Celsior if you want a Lexus LS twin without the variant complexity. The Toyota Century is the step up if budget allows. The Mitsuoka and Mazda Sentia are niche luxury alternatives that show up occasionally.
2JZ-GTE option; more sport-lux, strong tuning
Flagship V8 luxury; quieter, more isolated ride
Similar era RWD sedan; lighter, more driver-focused
Closest direct rival; VIP-friendly, similar size/mission
US-market alternative; easier registration and parts support
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Among Japanese luxury sedans of the same era, the Crown is the most affordable of the V8 cars, the Cedric and Gloria are the closest direct rivals, and the Cima and President are the more chauffeur-coded options. The Crown wins on parts availability and on resale stability. It loses on outright luxury feel to the Celsior and Century. The table below leans toward the Crown's strengths because that's where it actually competes.
| Feature | Toyota Crown | Nissan Cedric Y34 | Nissan Cima F50 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Market positioning | JDM exec sedan; VIP staple | JDM sport-lux sedan | JDM luxury flagship |
| Typical drivetrain | I6/V6/V8; RWD/AWD | V6/V8; RWD | I6/V8; RWD |
| Sporty trim focus | Athlete trims (sport) | Gran Turismo trims | Type S / sport packages |
| Luxury trim focus | Royal/Majesta (lux) | Cima/President vibe | Aristo as lux-sport alt |
| Ride comfort | Excellent; tuned for Japan | Softer, floatier feel | More isolated, heavier |
| Handling character | Stable GT; Athlete sharper | Similar GT, less precise | More sporty, smaller |
| Power potential | Varies; some turbo I6 trims | Turbo VQ options in era | 2JZ-GTE tuning ceiling |
| Reliability reputation | Strong; conservative engineering | Good, more electronics risk | Strong; premium parts costs |
| Parts availability | Good mechanicals; trim varies | More model-specific parts | Better global interchange |
| Import desirability (US) | Rising; 1999+ wave | Lower demand; niche VIP | High demand; Lexus badge |
| Value retention | Best in Athlete/wagons | Softer; fewer buyers | Strong; flagship cachet |
| VIP styling support | Huge aftermarket in Japan | Also strong VIP scene | Strong but pricier parts |
| Daily-driver usability | High; easy manners | Similar; older tech feel | More modern, more complex |
Gallery
Drivetrain
Editorial
The safest starting point for a US import is a documented S170 Royal Saloon from 1999 to 2003 — the generation that cleared the US 25-year rule starting in 2024. That gets you the 1JZ-GE or 2JZ-GE inline-six, a 4-speed or 5-speed automatic, and electronics that still work without modules being unobtainable. Skip anything under $5,000; a 1JZ or 2JZ timing belt that's never been done will erase whatever the lower purchase price saved.
For the chauffeur-flagship experience, the S170 Majesta adds a longer wheelbase and the 1UZ-FE 4.0 V8 over the standard Crown. The air suspension and JDM-only navigation modules will need attention on any example this age; budget $3,000 to $5,000 on top of the purchase price for catch-up maintenance in the first couple of years. AWD Majesta variants are heavier and thirstier than the standard Crown RWD cars.
The S170 Athlete V with the 1JZ-GTE turbocharged inline-six is the import enthusiast's pick — close to 280 PS from the factory, four-piston front brakes on later cars, and the same JZ engine family as the Mark II Tourer V and the Chaser. Athlete V production was modest, and clean documented examples are already priced above S180 Athlete cars that aren't US-eligible yet.
An early-production S180 with the 2GR-FSE or 1UR-FSE and no water pump documentation is the Crown to pass on. Toyota addressed the water pump failure mode on those engines in 2010; cars built before that need the updated pump confirmed in writing before purchase. An undocumented early S180 is a potential $2,000 repair on a car that doesn't clear the US 25-year rule until 2028 in any case.
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