Buyer's guide

15 min read

Toyota Mark II

Buyer's guide & specs

Production
1968-2004
US legal
2018
25-yr rule
Market range
$8K–$65K
median ~$26K
For sale
15
active now
Toyota Mark II — primary image
Toyota Mark II — the JDM mid-size sedan that became the de-facto JZX-platform drift base.

Background

Overview

The Toyota Mark II ran 36 years across nine generations (T60/T70, X10/X20, X30/X40, X60, X70, X80, X90, X100, X110) from September 1968 through 2004, when the Mark X replaced it. North American markets received the same car as the Toyota Cressida from 1976 to 1992 — 318,596 units sold between 1977 and 1995. Import demand today concentrates on the X90 and X100 Tourer V: the 1JZ-GTE twin-turbo trim with 280 hp, reinforced body, and sport suspension. The Mark II shared its platform with the Chaser and Cresta — Toyota's triplet sedans — and closed out with the 1JZ-FSE direct-injection NA engine in the X110.

Browse 15 JDM Mark II listings for sale

JZX100 Tourer V — the 1JZ-GTE drift weapon

The X100 Tourer V (1996–2000) is the chassis most US importers target. Toyota fitted it with the 1JZ-GTE 2.5L twin-turbo I6 rated at 280 PS under the Japanese gentlemen's agreement, sport-tuned suspension, a reinforced body shell, and — on a portion of cars — the R154 5-speed manual transmission.

The R154 is the key variable: most Tourer V production used a 4-speed automatic, and factory 5MT cars carry a meaningful premium. The X100 also offered a viscous-coupling LSD on sport trims and shared brake hardware, suspension geometry, and major driveline parts with the JZX100 Chaser and Cresta.

Parts interchange across the three sedans explains why the platform stays buildable thirty years later. The earlier X90 Tourer V (1992–1996) uses the non-VVT-i 1JZ-GTE and a slightly less stiff chassis; the X100 is generally preferred for the refreshed interior and wider availability of factory 5MT cars.

Mark II vs Chaser vs Cresta — Toyota's triplet sedans

From 1980 through 2001 Toyota built three sedans on a single platform: the Mark II, the Chaser, and the Cresta. All three shared the floor pan, suspension hardware, and drivetrains; differences were in the sheet metal, trim packaging, and dealer channel.

The Mark II and Chaser sold through Toyota Auto Store; the Cresta took the more formal-luxury angle through Toyota Vista Store. The Tourer V (Mark II) and Tourer V (Chaser) used the same 1JZ-GTE drivetrain at 280 PS; the Cresta's equivalent was the Roulant trim.

For the 2001 X110 generation, Toyota retired both the Chaser and Cresta names and consolidated the line into the Mark II and the new Verossa sedan.

Editorial notes

Quick read

Key takeaways

Constants

Common across all Mark II generations

Chassis history

Generation timeline

The Mark II ran 36 years from 1968 until 2004, and nine generations is a lot of car to keep straight. The early T60 through X70 cars are interesting historically but rarely cross over to the US. The X80 is where the 1JZ engine family first showed up. The X90 introduced the Tourer V nameplate. The X100 is the one most people picture when they hear Mark II, and the X110 closed out the run before the Mark X replaced it.

X80

X80 (GX/JZX81; 1988–1992)

Guide coming soon
X90

X90 (JZX90; 1992–1996)

Guide coming soon
JZX100 (X100)

X100 (JZX100; 1996–2000)

Buyer's call

Should you buy a Toyota Mark II?

The Mark II is the kind of car where the trade-offs depend almost entirely on which trim you're looking at. A Tourer V and a base Grande are different propositions even though they wear the same badge. The general pattern holds across the run though, and the strong points and weak points have stayed consistent enough to talk about as one car.

Why you'll love it

  • 1JZ/2JZ drivetrain upside Turbo trims take power reliably; NA trims swap-friendly with deep aftermarket.
  • RWD dynamics and balance Long wheelbase stability with predictable breakaway; great for street or drift.
  • Tourer V halo desirability Factory 1JZ-GTE + sport trim drives top demand and strongest resale.
  • Huge parts interchangeability Shares components with Chaser/Cresta/Crown; easy sourcing for mechanical parts.
  • Comfortable real-world sedan Four doors, usable rear seats, and quiet cruising; easier to live with than coupes.
  • Strong community knowledge Well-documented swaps, wiring, and maintenance; many proven build recipes.
  • Value in non-turbo trims Grande/NA cars offer same chassis look/feel for less; ideal clean daily base.
  • Manual conversion viable R154/W55/W58 swaps common; many off-the-shelf mounts and pedal solutions.

Why you might not

  • Rust and prior crash repairs Sills, rear arches, floors, and trunk wells rust; many cars have drift damage.
  • Manual scarcity premium Factory 5MT Tourer V is rare; buyers overpay or settle for swapped examples.
  • Modified car risk Boost creep, poor wiring, cheap coilovers, and cut harnesses hurt reliability/value.
  • Aging electronics/interior Climate control, LCDs, and brittle plastics fail; OEM trim can be hard to find.
  • Automatic limitations A340 autos are durable but dull; high-power builds need cooling and upgrades.
  • Insurance/registration friction Import paperwork, inspections, and parts lead times vary by state and insurer.
  • Fuel and cooling sensitivity Turbo cars need good fuel and cooling; neglected radiators cause overheating.
  • Weight vs sport coupes Heavier than Silvia/AE86; needs suspension/brakes to feel sharp on track.
Who should not buy this
  • Anyone needing modern crash safety and airbags
  • Buyers who can't wrench or pay a JDM specialist
  • People needing guaranteed parts next-day locally
  • California residents without a clear compliance plan
  • Those expecting 30+ mpg or cheap fuel costs
  • Drivers wanting quiet, modern NVH and refinement
  • Anyone who hates chasing oil leaks and seepage
  • People who won't do timing belt on schedule
  • Buyers who need OBD2 plug-in diagnostics everywhere
  • Those needing perfect A/C without ongoing upkeep
  • Owners without covered parking (rust and leaks worsen)
  • People who want zero electrical gremlins from age
  • Anyone buying a heavily modified/tuned example
  • Those who can't tolerate RHD quirks in LHD traffic
  • People who need strong dealer support and recalls
  • Drivers in salted-road regions without rustproofing
  • Anyone needing modern infotainment and phone integration
  • Buyers expecting cheap insurance or easy financing
  • People who won't run proper oil and cooling maintenance
  • Those who need a one-car solution with no downtime

Reliability

Common issues & solutions

The Mark II is a mechanically tough car. The 1JZ and 2JZ engines are famously durable, and the chassis itself doesn't have hidden weak spots. Most of the trouble comes from age and from how hard a given car was driven. The cooling system needs attention. The auto transmissions on neglected cars start to slip. The interior plastics fade and the dash cracks. Walk away from anything that's been drifted hard without paperwork showing the work.

Issue Cause Solution Est. cost
Timing belt overdue Unknown history; long intervals; age cracking Full TB kit: belt, idlers, tensioner, WP $700-1400
Cam/crank seal oil leak Aged seals; crank pulley wear; high mileage Replace seals; inspect pulley; reseal front cover $400-1200
Valve cover gasket leak Hardened gasket; overtorque; PCV restriction Replace gasket/grommets; service PCV; clean wells $150-450
Rear main seal leak Age; crankcase pressure; worn seal lip Replace RMS during clutch or trans service $700-1600
Cooling system failures Old radiator tanks; brittle hoses; weak cap Radiator/hoses/thermostat/cap; proper bleed $400-1100
Heater core seep/leak Corrosion; old coolant; electrolysis Replace heater core; flush; new coolant $900-1800
Turbo oil smoke (1JZ) Worn seals/bearings; poor oiling; high heat Rebuild/replace turbos; check PCV and drain $900-2500
Boost creep/overboost Exhaust mods; weak wastegate control; leaks Fix leaks; proper boost control; tune if needed $200-1200
Detonation under load Bad tune; low octane; heat soak; lean fuel Compression test; fuel system check; proper tune $300-2500
Ignition coil misfire Aged coils/boots; oil in plug wells; heat Replace coils/boots; plugs; fix valve cover leak $250-900
Injector seal fuel leak Hardened O-rings/insulators; ethanol exposure Replace injector seals/insulators; inspect rail $200-600
Fuel pump weak/noisy Age; clogged sock; low tank running Replace pump and filter; verify pressure $250-700
A/T shift flare/slip Worn clutches; overheated ATF; neglect Service fluid early; rebuild/replace if slipping $250-3500
A/T delayed engagement Valve body wear; low fluid; internal seals Check level; service; valve body or rebuild $250-3200
M/T 2nd gear crunch Synchro wear; wrong fluid; hard driving Correct fluid; rebuild gearbox if persistent $120-2500
Clutch slip/chatter Worn disc; oil contamination; weak pressure plate Clutch kit; resurface flywheel; fix oil leaks $700-1600
Driveshaft vibration Worn center bearing; U-joints; bent shaft Replace bearing/U-joints; balance or replace shaft $300-1200
Diff whine/leaks Worn bearings; low oil; pinion seal aging Reseal; refill; rebuild diff if noisy $200-1800
Front ball joint wear Age; torn boots; lowered suspension stress Replace ball joints; align; inspect control arms $250-700
Control arm bushing tear Rubber aging; oil exposure; aggressive driving Replace bushings/arms; consider quality poly $400-1200
Rear subframe bushings Collapsed rubber; age; torque loads Replace bushings; check subframe rust/cracks $600-1600
Steering rack leak Seal wear; contaminated fluid; torn boots Rebuild/replace rack; flush PS system $600-1600
PS pump whine Low fluid from leaks; worn pump; aeration Fix leaks; flush; replace pump if noisy $250-900
Brake caliper sticking Seized slide pins; torn boots; corrosion Rebuild/replace calipers; new pads/rotors $300-1200
Warped brake rotors Cheap rotors; overheated; stuck caliper Quality rotors/pads; fix caliper; bed properly $250-800
ABS sensor faults Broken wiring; dirty tone rings; sensor aging Repair wiring; clean rings; replace sensor $150-700
Rust in rockers/sills Poor drainage; salted roads; hidden seam rust Cut/weld repair; treat cavities; avoid undercoat $800-5000
Trunk water intrusion Tail light seals; trunk gasket; seam sealer cracks Reseal lights/seams; replace gasket; dry interior $150-800
Sunroof drain leaks Clogged drains; cracked tubes; poor prior repair Clear/replace drains; dry and treat mold $150-900
Cluster backlight failure Aged bulbs; solder cracks; dimmer issues Replace bulbs/LED; reflow solder; check grounds $80-400
Speedo not working Vehicle speed sensor; cluster fault; wiring Test VSS; repair wiring; cluster service $150-700
Climate control faults Blend door servo; control head aging; vacuum leaks Diagnose actuators; repair controls; reseal ducts $200-900
A/C weak or warm Low refrigerant; condenser leak; tired compressor Leak test; replace O-rings; compressor if needed $200-1500
Window regulator slow Dry tracks; weak motor; worn regulator cables Lubricate tracks; replace regulator/motor $150-600
Door lock actuator weak Aged actuator motor; sticky linkages Replace actuators; clean/lube mechanisms $150-700
Power antenna failure Stripped mast; dead motor; water intrusion Replace mast/motor; delete if desired $80-400
Aftermarket wiring hacks Alarm/stereo/boost controller poor installs Trace/repair harness; restore grounds/fuses $200-2000

Market

Differences between JDM & USDM

The Mark II and the North American Cressida share a platform and a production line but were not the same car at trim level. The Cressida (sold in the US 1976–1992, in Canada and Australia on overlapping timelines) was built around the JDM Mark II X40 through X80 generations and re-trimmed for export markets: Cressida fitment was always the higher-content grades, with automatic transmissions overwhelmingly dominant, and the export 5M-GE / 7M-GE NA inline-six rather than the 1G-GTE or 1JZ-GTE turbo engines reserved for JDM trims. The JDM-only Tourer V (X90, X100) and iR-V (X110) — the 1JZ-GTE twin-turbo and VVT-i single-turbo sport trims — were never officially sold in any export market. Australia received the Cressida through 1993; Toyota pulled it to clear space for the Camry and the Lexus ES300 / LS400. In North America the Cressida was replaced by the front-wheel-drive Avalon in 1995. For US buyers today, the Tourer V and iR-V cars are the import-only halo trims — every Tourer V or iR-V on US roads arrived via 25-year-rule import, not original factory channels.

Toyota Mark II JZX100 — 1JZ-GTE drift footage

Specs

Technical specifications

The Mark II ran a mix of fours and sixes across the run, but the engines that matter to import buyers are the 1JZ-GE NA, the 1JZ-GTE twin-turbo, the 1JZ-GTE VVT-i single-turbo on the X110, and the 2JZ-GE NA. The Tourer V trims on the X90 and X100 are the ones with the 280 PS 1JZ-GTE. Most cars are 4-speed automatic. A portion of Tourer V production got the R154 5-speed manual, and those are the ones people pay for.

Engine options

Chassis Engine Displacement Power Boost Notes
X70 1G-EU 2.0L estimated N/A SOHC I6; exact JDM rating varies
X70 1G-GEU 2.0L estimated N/A DOHC I6; exact JDM rating varies
X70 1G-GTEU 2.0L estimated estimated Twin-turbo I6; exact rating varies
X70 5M-GEU 2.8L estimated N/A DOHC I6; exact JDM rating varies
X70/X80/X90/X100 2L 2.4L estimated N/A Diesel I4; output varies by year/market
X70/X80/X90/X100 2L-T 2.4L estimated estimated Turbo diesel I4; output varies
X80/X90/X100 2L-TE 2.4L estimated estimated Turbo diesel I4 (EFI); output varies
X80/X90/X100 1G-FE 2.0L estimated N/A DOHC I6; BEAMS on some later apps
X80 7M-GE 3.0L estimated N/A DOHC I6; exact JDM rating varies
X80 7M-GTE 3.0L estimated estimated Turbo I6; exact JDM rating varies
X80/X90/X100 1JZ-GE 2.5L estimated N/A NA I6; VVT-i on later years
X90/X100 1JZ-GTE 2.5L 276hp @ 6200rpm (JIS) estimated ~10-11 psi Twin-turbo I6; 280PS era rating
X90/X100/X110 2JZ-GE 3.0L estimated N/A NA I6; VVT-i on later years
X110 1JZ-FSE 2.5L estimated N/A D-4 direct injection I6; NA
X110 1JZ-GTE 2.5L 276hp @ 6200rpm (JIS) estimated ~11-12 psi Single turbo VVT-i I6; 280PS era

Transmission options

Type Ratios Availability Notes
5-speed Manual (R154) 3.251/1.955/1.310/1.000/0.753 X90/X100 Tourer V (some) Heavy-duty 5MT; turbo models
5-speed Manual (W55/W57 family) estimated NA trims (some markets/years) Ratios vary by W-series variant
4-speed Automatic (A340E family) 2.804/1.531/1.000/0.705 Many X80/X90/X100 trims Electronically controlled; RWD
4-speed Automatic (A341E family) 2.804/1.531/1.000/0.705 Turbo/high-output trims (some) Stronger A340 variant; RWD
5-speed Automatic (A650E family) 3.357/2.180/1.424/1.000/0.753 X110 iR/iR-S (some) ECT; used with later NA engines

Lineup

Variants & trims

Mark II trims went from GL and Grande at the volume end up to Tourer S, Tourer V, and on the X110 the Grande iR-S and iR-V. The Tourer V is the halo trim with the 1JZ-GTE and the reinforced body shell. The iR-V on the X110 is the same idea with the VVT-i engine. The Grande and Grande G are the comfortable mid-trim cars that most JDM owners actually drove every day.

Generation Trim Engine Key features
Mark II (T60/T70, 3rd gen) Standard/Deluxe 4-cyl/6-cyl (market-dependent) Base grade, bench seat (some), steel wheels
Mark II (T60/T70, 3rd gen) GL 4-cyl/6-cyl (market-dependent) Upgraded interior, more chrome, higher equipment
Mark II (T60/T70, 3rd gen) LG 6-cyl (market-dependent) Luxury grade, improved trim, comfort equipment
Mark II (T60/T70, 3rd gen) GSS (hardtop) 6-cyl (market-dependent) Sport grade, hardtop, sport interior/exterior
Mark II (X30/X40, 4th gen) Standard/Deluxe 4-cyl/6-cyl (market-dependent) Base grade, steel wheels, minimal options
Mark II (X30/X40, 4th gen) GL 4-cyl/6-cyl (market-dependent) Mid grade, upgraded interior, more equipment
Mark II (X30/X40, 4th gen) LG 6-cyl (market-dependent) Luxury grade, velour, higher audio/trim
Mark II (X30/X40, 4th gen) GT (hardtop) 6-cyl (market-dependent) Sport grade, hardtop, sport suspension (some)
Mark II (X50/X60, 5th gen) L/GL 4-cyl/6-cyl (market-dependent) Base-mid grades, comfort focus, steel/alloy mix
Mark II (X50/X60, 5th gen) LG Grande 6-cyl (market-dependent) Luxury grade, upgraded interior, more options
Mark II (X50/X60, 5th gen) GT (hardtop) 6-cyl (market-dependent) Sport grade, hardtop, sport seats/trim
Mark II (X70, 6th gen) XL 1G-EU/1G-GEU/2L/2L-T (market-dependent) Base grade, cloth, simple audio, steel wheels
Mark II (X70, 6th gen) GL 1G-EU/1G-GEU/2L/2L-T (market-dependent) Mid grade, more trim, power accessories (some)
Mark II (X70, 6th gen) Grande 1G-GEU/1G-GTEU/5M-GEU/2L-T Luxury grade, velour, higher audio, alloys
Mark II (X70, 6th gen) Grande G 1G-GTEU/5M-GEU (market-dependent) Top luxury, digital cluster (some), more options
Mark II (X70, 6th gen) GT Twin Turbo 1G-GTEU Turbo, sport trim, alloys, sport suspension (some)
Mark II (X80, 7th gen) XL 1G-FE/2L/2L-T/2L-TE (market-dependent) Base grade, cloth, simple audio, steel wheels
Mark II (X80, 7th gen) GL 1G-FE/2L/2L-T/2L-TE (market-dependent) Mid grade, more equipment, power accessories
Mark II (X80, 7th gen) Grande 1G-FE/1G-GTE/7M-GE/7M-GTE/1JZ-GE Luxury grade, velour, alloys, higher audio
Mark II (X80, 7th gen) Grande G 1JZ-GE/7M-GE (market-dependent) Top luxury, more options, premium interior
Mark II (X80, 7th gen) GT Twin Turbo 1G-GTE/7M-GTE (market-dependent) Turbo, sport trim, sport suspension, alloys
Mark II (X90, 8th gen) XL 2L/2L-TE/1G-FE (market-dependent) Base grade, cloth, steel wheels, basic audio
Mark II (X90, 8th gen) GL 2L-TE/1G-FE (market-dependent) Mid grade, more equipment, power accessories
Mark II (X90, 8th gen) Grande 1G-FE/1JZ-GE/1JZ-GTE/2JZ-GE Luxury, velour, alloys, optional sunroof
Mark II (X90, 8th gen) Grande G 1JZ-GE/2JZ-GE Top luxury, premium interior, higher equipment
Mark II (X90, 8th gen) Tourer S 1JZ-GE Sport grade, firmer suspension, aero (some)
Mark II (X90, 8th gen) Tourer V 1JZ-GTE Twin turbo, sport suspension, LSD (some), aero
Mark II (X100, 9th gen) XL 2L-TE/1G-FE (market-dependent) Base grade, cloth, steel wheels, basic audio
Mark II (X100, 9th gen) GL 2L-TE/1G-FE (market-dependent) Mid grade, more equipment, power accessories
Mark II (X100, 9th gen) Grande 1G-FE/1JZ-GE/1JZ-GTE/2JZ-GE Luxury, velour, alloys, optional sunroof
Mark II (X100, 9th gen) Grande G 1JZ-GE/2JZ-GE Top luxury, premium interior, higher equipment
Mark II (X100, 9th gen) Tourer S 1JZ-GE Sport grade, aero (some), firmer suspension
Mark II (X100, 9th gen) Tourer V 1JZ-GTE Twin turbo, R154/AT, sport suspension, LSD (some)
Mark II (X110, 10th gen) Grande 1G-FE/1JZ-FSE/1JZ-GE (market-dependent) Luxury grade, alloys, optional nav, comfort focus
Mark II (X110, 10th gen) Grande G 1JZ-FSE/1JZ-GE/2JZ-GE (market-dependent) Top luxury, premium interior, higher equipment
Mark II (X110, 10th gen) iR 1JZ-GE Sport grade, body kit (some), firmer suspension
Mark II (X110, 10th gen) iR-S 1JZ-GE Sport, 5AT, aero, sport seats/trim
Mark II (X110, 10th gen) iR-V 1JZ-GTE Turbo, 5MT/4AT, sport suspension, LSD (some)

Production

Sales numbers by year

Toyota built the Mark II in big numbers for most of its run. The North American Cressida sold 318,596 cars between 1977 and 1995. Peak US Cressida year was 1985 at over 45,000 units. JDM sales tapered through the X100 and X110 as Toyota's lineup widened and the Mark II's slot got squeezed by the Crown, the Aristo, and eventually the Mark X.

YearExportsNotes
19772,526First US sales as Cressida
197812,484
197911,910
198011,627
198129,583
198237,448
198339,755
198434,456
198545,286Peak US Cressida sales year
198642,180
198721,968
198814,035
198923,785
199012,710
19919,415
19923,528Final US Cressida model year
1993322
19945
199510Cressida replaced by Avalon in North America

Pricing

Average prices & original MSRP

Mark II prices today have nothing to do with what the car cost new. A clean 4-speed automatic Tourer V might trade around $20,000 to $30,000. A factory R154 5-speed manual Tourer V is a different conversation and the right car can clear $50,000. Modified and drifted cars sit below stock, and base Grande and GL cars are still affordable entry points if you don't need the turbo.

Today's market range: $8,000 to $65,000 (median ~$26,000). Source: JDMBUYSELL / USS Auction.

Tourer V 5MT prices remain firm with low supply; clean autos also rising as manuals vanish. Modified/drifted cars lag. As X100/X110 become easier to import, demand broadens, but top premiums stay with rust-free, stock examples.

Inspect

Pre-purchase inspection checklist

Go through this list with the seller before you put money down. The Critical items are the ones that will end the deal if there's no paperwork. The High items can be priced into the offer. A cold start, ten minutes at idle, and a 30 minute drive will surface most of what a Mark II is going to do to you in the first year.

Critical priority

High priority

Medium priority

Low priority

Cross-shop

Comparable alternatives

If the Mark II doesn't end up being right, the natural alternatives are its triplet siblings, the Toyota Chaser and Toyota Cresta. Same platform, same engines, different sheet metal and different dealer channel. Beyond the triplets, the Nissan Skyline R33 GTS-t and the Nissan Laurel C35 Medalist sit in similar territory.

Compare

How it compares

Among the JDM RWD turbo six sedans of the late 1990s and early 2000s, the Mark II is the comfortable one, the Skyline is the sporty one, and the Cefiro and Laurel are the quieter alternatives. The table below leans on what the Mark II actually does well, which is daily usability with real tuning headroom underneath.

Feature Toyota Mark II Nissan Laurel C35 Toyota Chaser X100
Layout/mission RWD sport sedan RWD sport sedan RWD sport sedan
Halo trim Tourer V RB25DET Type R
Turbo engine 1JZ-GTE 2.5T I6 RB25DET 2.5T I6 1JZ-GTE 2.5T I6
Stock power (JP) 280 PS (gentlemen) 280 PS (typical) 280 PS (typical)
Transmission options 5MT rare; 4AT common 5MT rare; 4AT common 5MT rarer; 4AT common
Diff/traction LSD on sport trims LSD on some trims LSD on Type R/V
Chassis feel Stable, comfort-leaning Softer, luxury-leaning Sportier steering feel
Aftermarket depth Massive (JZ platform) Strong (RB platform) Massive (shared parts)
Parts interchange Chaser/Cresta/Crown Skyline/Stagea bits Mark II/Cresta shared
Drift popularity High (X90/X100) Medium-high Very high
Cabin space Excellent rear legroom Good rear legroom Similar; slightly tighter
Ride comfort Comfort-biased Most comfort-biased Sport-biased trims
Typical price (US) $12k-$45k+ $10k-$35k $15k-$55k+
Collector ceiling High for 5MT Tourer V Moderate; fewer icons Very high; cult status
Reliability baseline Strong if unmodified Strong; watch RB cooling Strong; same JZ caveats

Gallery

Editorial

The buyer's read

The question with any Mark II purchase is which trim. A factory R154 5-speed manual JZX100 Tourer V carries the smallest supply and the highest price — expect $40,000 and up for a clean documented example. A 4-speed automatic Tourer V costs roughly half that and delivers the same 1JZ-GTE engine, reinforced body, and parts catalog; if a manual swap is planned anyway, the automatic is the more practical starting point.

If the turbo isn't required, X100 and X110 Grande and Grande G cars represent strong value. The 1JZ-GE NA is a durable engine, parts remain cheap, and a clean Grande with leather looks the part without the Tourer V premium. The X110 iR-V uses the VVT-i 1JZ-GTE at the same 280 PS rating and prices haven't yet caught up to the X100 — making it a viable alternative for buyers who don't insist on the earlier chassis.

The car to avoid is a heavily modified Tourer V without paperwork. The JZX100 was the drift platform of the late 1990s and many cars absorbed hard use before export. Cracked dashes and faded interiors are age-normal; bent subframes, replaced floors, and welded diffs are not.

Pay for a pre-purchase inspection in Japan, or buy locally from a seller who already imported and sorted the car. Auction records on Classic.com show what sorted examples actually clear. A rough Tourer V will cost more in the first year than the discount on purchase, and that difference rarely comes back at resale.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Which Mark II is most desirable?
The X90/X100 Tourer V is the halo. Factory 5MT and clean, stock condition bring top money.
What should I pay for a Tourer V in the US?
Expect roughly $25k-$45k+ depending on 5MT vs auto, rust, mileage, and originality; show cars go higher.
Are automatic Mark IIs worth buying?
Yes. A340 autos are durable and cheaper; budget for trans cooler and consider a manual swap later.
Common rust areas to inspect?
Check sills/rockers, rear arches, floor pans, jack points, and trunk well; inspect under side skirts.
Is the 1JZ-GTE reliable at higher boost?
Generally yes with supporting mods. Prioritize fueling, intercooling, timing, and a healthy cooling system.
What mods hurt value the most?
Poor wiring, cut harnesses, cheap coilovers, loud exhaust, and unknown turbo setups. Stock ECU/airbox helps resale.
What are the best trims besides Tourer V?
Tourer S and clean Grande trims are great value. NA cars are comfy and can be upgraded without Tourer V tax.
What makes a Mark II different from Chaser/Cresta?
They share the platform; differences are styling and trim mix. Mark II is often the most understated and best value.

Citations

Sources & references

Sources (11)
  1. Toyota Mark II — encyclopedic overview — WikipediaVerified
  2. Toyota Cressida — export-market overview — WikipediaVerified
  3. Toyota JZ engine family (1JZ-GE, 1JZ-GTE, 1JZ-FSE, 2JZ-GE) — WikipediaVerified
  4. Toyota Chaser — JZX-platform sibling reference — WikipediaVerified
  5. Toyota Cresta — JZX-platform sibling reference — WikipediaVerified
  6. Toyota Verossa — X110-era replacement for Chaser and Cresta — WikipediaVerified
  7. Bring a Trailer auction results — Toyota Cressida (Mark II export) — Bring a TrailerVerified
  8. Classic.com aggregated sales — Toyota Mark II — Classic.comVerified
  9. Goo-net Exchange — Toyota Mark II export listings — Goo-netVerified
  10. Carsensor — Toyota Mark II domestic Japan listings — Carsensor (Recruit)Verified
  11. Toyota 75-year history — Motomachi plant overview — Toyota Motor CorporationVerified

Sources last verified:

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