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Home - News - The New Lexus LFA Is Electric: Everything We Know About the Successor to the V10 Legend

The New Lexus LFA Is Electric: Everything We Know About the Successor to the V10 Legend

John Karlsson by John Karlsson
July 12, 2026
in News
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New Lexus LFA side profile showing the 47-inch roofline, illustration based on the official concept

The new Lexus LFA Concept in profile. Illustration based on official Lexus reference imagery.

The new Lexus LFA is real, it is fully electric, and this week it was parked on the lawn at the Goodwood Festival of Speed for the world to argue about in person. Sixteen years after the original stunned everyone with a 9,000-rpm V10, Lexus has revived its most sacred nameplate for the battery era — and the decision has split the enthusiast world straight down the middle.

Here is everything we actually know about the new Lexus LFA, separated from the noise.

From Sport Concept to New Lexus LFA

New Lexus LFA electric supercar front three-quarter view, studio illustration based on the official concept
The new Lexus LFA Concept. Illustration based on official Lexus reference imagery.

The car was hiding in plain sight for months. What Lexus showed at Monterey Car Week and the Japan Mobility Show in 2025 as the anonymous-sounding “Sport Concept” was world-premiered again that December at Toyota’s Woven City — this time with partial specifications and its real name attached. The new Lexus LFA is a battery-electric two-seater, and Lexus is explicit that this is a preview of a production car, not a design study destined for a museum basement.

The project carries unusual weight inside Toyota. It was championed by chairman Akio Toyoda — Master Driver “Morizo” himself — under a philosophy the company compares to Shikinen Sengu, the Shinto ritual of periodically rebuilding a shrine so that the craft of building it is never lost. The LFA name, in other words, is being treated as a vessel for passing hand-built sports car knowledge to the next generation of engineers, the way the original LFA inherited that role from the Toyota 2000GT.

An Electric Supercar Built Alongside a Race Car

The new Lexus LFA is not being developed in isolation. It shares its bones — a light, high-rigidity all-aluminum structure with megacastings supporting the suspension at each corner — with two combustion siblings: Toyota’s GR GT road car, powered by a 4.0-liter twin-turbo V8 hybrid, and the GR GT3 customer race car that will take the fight to Ferrari, Porsche, and McLaren in international GT racing.

All three share an identical 107.3-inch wheelbase and the same core engineering targets: low center of gravity, low weight, high rigidity, and obsessive aerodynamic development. The electric LFA is the wild card of the trio, tasked with proving those virtues survive the removal of the engine entirely. All three cars appeared together at Goodwood this week — the same event where McLaren pulled the covers off the 788HS, making this one of the densest reveal weekends in recent memory.

New Lexus LFA Specs: What We Know So Far

New Lexus LFA side profile showing the 47-inch roofline, illustration based on the official concept
The new Lexus LFA Concept in profile. Illustration based on official Lexus reference imagery.
Powertrain Battery electric, output undisclosed (~1,000 hp targeted per reports)
0–60 mph Low-2-second range (claimed target)
Range target Over 430 miles (700 km)
Length 184.6 in
Width 80.3 in
Height 47 in
Wheelbase 107.3 in (shared with GR GT)
Structure All-aluminum frame with megacastings
Expected production 2027
Expected price High six figures

For scale, those dimensions put the new Lexus LFA in the same footprint territory as an Aston Martin DB12 or Ferrari Roma, but dramatically lower — at 47 inches tall, it sits closer to the ground than almost anything this side of a GT3 grid. Lexus has confirmed steer-by-wire and a cockpit philosophy it calls Discover Immersion, built around pulling the driver into the act of driving rather than burying them in screens.

The Solid-State Battery Question

The most consequential rumor surrounding the car: the new Lexus LFA is widely expected to be among the first production vehicles to carry Toyota’s long-promised solid-state batteries, with the company still targeting the world’s first practical automotive application around 2028. Solid-state chemistry promises dramatically higher energy density, faster charging, and better behavior at temperature extremes — exactly the properties a 430-mile, 1,000-horsepower supercar needs.

A note of healthy skepticism is warranted. Toyota has been promising solid-state batteries are just around the corner for the better part of a decade, and the timeline has slipped before. If the technology lands on schedule, the LFA becomes a genuine engineering landmark. If it does not, Lexus will be fielding a conventional lithium-ion supercar against rivals already pushing 1,500-plus horsepower.

The V10 Elephant in the Room

New Lexus LFA rear view with full-width light bar, illustration based on the official concept
The new Lexus LFA Concept from the rear. Illustration based on official Lexus reference imagery.

There is no way around it: the original LFA’s 4.8-liter V10 — 552 horsepower, a 9,000-rpm redline, and a soundtrack Yamaha helped tune like a musical instrument — is the single most beloved thing about the car. Its electric successor will make none of those noises, and Lexus knows it. The company openly acknowledges the emotional gap and is betting that instant torque, extreme acceleration, and chassis purity can build a different kind of thrill.

Purists do have an escape hatch. The combustion GR GT — and the Lexus-badged version expected to be called LFR — carries the twin-turbo V8 hybrid and the racing homologation story, and more than a few commentators have already crowned it the “true” spiritual successor. The reality is that Toyota is building both answers at once and letting the market vote.

Price, Timeline, and What It Means for Original LFA Values

Lexus has signaled a high six-figure price, production is expected to begin around 2027, and the GR GT should reach customers first in late 2026. Nothing about volume has been confirmed, though the original’s 500-unit run looms large over every speculation thread.

Speaking of the original: the announcement has done nothing to cool the first LFA’s market. A car that struggled to find 500 buyers at $375,000 now trades north of $800,000 on the secondary market, and halo-successor announcements have historically pushed original-icon values higher, not lower — a dynamic we have covered in depth in our look at how a new generation of collectors is repricing the market. The V10 LFA is finished appreciating for the same reason the new one exists: they are never making anything like it again.

The new Lexus LFA will not please everyone, and it is not trying to. It is trying to prove that the most obsessive sports car company in Japan can make electrons feel like an event. We will be tracking every development — specs, pricing, allocation, and that solid-state battery bet — as the 2027 production date approaches.

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