RE: Toyota upgrades the GR Yaris (again)
RE: Toyota upgrades the GR Yaris (again)
Friday 13th March

Toyota upgrades the GR Yaris (again)

GR Yaris Type 26 gets new steering wheel and EPS tweaks, racy rubber and new options


As the rest of the world apparently gives up on hot hatches, so Toyota perseveres, fighting the good fight and using competition to make its Gazoo Racing cars even better. Good on them. Even in smaller numbers and at more money than ever, the GR Yaris is a beacon of hot hatch hope in a rather sombre landscape. Having blown everyone away as the GR Yaris Type 20 almost six years ago, what you’re looking at here is the GR Yaris Type 26, a ‘partially upgraded’ model that ‘incorporates improvements derived from insights gained from competing in motorsports.’

And when they say partial, they really do mean partial, but the GR Yaris is also PH’s greatest hot hatch since 1998. When Toyota tweaks it, however incrementally, we write about it. The steering wheel is probably the most significant change, seen on a few recent special editions and now making it to the series production model. As well as looking like something from a retro GT1 racer, complete with illuminated switches for nighttime stages (or whatever you call after dark petrol runs), it’s said to be more functional as well. See Toyota had feedback suggesting that the old wheel made it too easy to press buttons while hurling lock this way and that; they also weren’t happy about having to change grip when steering up to 180 degrees. So this wheel is a smaller diameter than before (now 360mm, a similar trick as once used on the GT86), with redesigned grip sections that ‘fit comfortably in the palms when on the wheel during cornering’. Always thinking of something, those GR folk. 

The steering system itself has also been revised, specifically the assist function of the electric power steering. Seemingly because there was nothing else left to fiddle with, the torsion bar rigidity in the torque sensor has been ‘optimised’ and the assist software has been tweaked so it can help out more often. Specifically when thrashing a Yaris, it sounds like, or ‘cornering under extremely high loads’ as Toyota calls it. The changes should also mean the EPS assist works regardless of rubber, from rally tyres to semi-slicks. 

Speaking of which, there’s a new tyre option on the more expensive GR Yarises in Japan. The RZs and the Aero Performance car will now be fitted with Bridgestone Potenza Race tyres, the kind of thing typically seen on Lamborghinis and promising even more grip from the famously limpet-like Yaris. The dampers have been modified to take advantage.

As for the options, buyers of the latest GR will be able to get the vertical handbrake that looks so at home in the little Toyota. There’ll also be a heated wheel and seat offered. Annoyingly a driver monitor camera, the kind of thing that was so irksome in a Land Cruiser, will be standard fit. But you can’t have everything. And if ever there was a car that’s gonna keep you awake, the GRY is certainly it. 

In Japan, there are five models in the 2026 range, and they’re up to 304hp. And a GR Yaris is less than £20k. But there is good news for UK customers of sorts, because this update will come here; as mentioned at the top, something is absolutely better than nothing when it comes to hot hatches in 2026. Expect prices to follow later in the year. In the meantime, the classifieds are chock-a-block


Author
Discussion

Water Fairy

Original Poster:

6,437 posts

178 months

Bravo Toyota and long may it continue

Type 20 is on my list one day

GreatScott2016

2,246 posts

111 months

Yep, good on Toyota, and undoubtedly a good drive, but it remain a bit of an ugly duckling to me. frown

fantheman80

2,395 posts

72 months

Do you really need al those switches on the steering wheel? Liked the GR for its simplicity, now it looks like its trying to outdo an F1 paddle

sgtbash

756 posts

159 months

Can we buy these again? Each time I have looked there has been no availability!

Pica-Pica

16,043 posts

107 months

fantheman80 said:
Do you really need al those switches on the steering wheel? Liked the GR for its simplicity, now it looks like its trying to outdo an F1 paddle
They do look a bit OTT, and like the ones nearer to the horizontal plane, they don't seem easy for a thumb to reach

ChrisCh86

1,089 posts

67 months

sgtbash said:
Can we buy these again? Each time I have looked there has been no availability!
No, not really in the UK. Each dealer had an allocation of 1 or 2 MY25 Aero Performance cars, and they're priced at £48,995.

To get one you had to phone around the dealers until you found one that hadn't already sold their allocation.


I'm currently trying to source one from Japan instead, but getting the right spec is proving tricky

KobayashiMaru86

1,841 posts

233 months

Ideal to import. Quite a few places are and then there's no GPF to worry about. I'm tempted to when the Swift dies.

UnderSteerD

286 posts

205 months

KobayashiMaru86 said:
Ideal to import. Quite a few places are and then there's no GPF to worry about. I'm tempted to when the Swift dies.
I had a cursory look at doing the same, but it seems there's no easy solution to getting the OEM dash to display the units we use in the UK. The answer appeared to be fitting an aftermarket speedo readout.

But it's definitely something I'd look at again if/when a decent solution arrives.

Taz73

395 posts

35 months

Awesome cars, never heard them referred as type 20/24/26 before, I assume this equates to their launch years? First launching 2020, face lift in 2024 and this new one this year?

The new wheel does look a little fussy but I’d imagine it works well with less risk of accidentally operating something.

Always thought it a shame they didn’t offer them in more colours, there’s some nice blues and greens on the standard Yaris, as well as orange and others that would look good on the GR.

IMI A

9,951 posts

224 months

I'd love one of these but boy are new hatchbacks dear nowadays. I gulped when i bought a 2016 7 GTI PP and they were £36k for a loaded one. VW sold me that car for £26k with a discount for cash buy as it was old stock they couldn't sell as an R was the same money. Prices have gone crazy for the humble pocket rockets. RS3 limited edition £90,000. People are buying them though so what do I know. Will stick with my old GTI!

rthomp25

100 posts

254 months

I hope you can order and fit the new wheel on my 25MY GRY (UK) ....???? Looks good to me!

Leon R

3,695 posts

119 months

Less than £20,000 in Japan? That's amazing value.

ecsrobin

18,521 posts

188 months

KobayashiMaru86 said:
Ideal to import. Quite a few places are and then there's no GPF to worry about. I'm tempted to when the Swift dies.
Not only will you get the extra 10bhp from no GPF but you will gain 45NM torque vs an EU car due to emissions regs.

Wab1974uk

1,257 posts

50 months

fantheman80 said:
Do you really need al those switches on the steering wheel? Liked the GR for its simplicity, now it looks like its trying to outdo an F1 paddle
Agreed. It look overly busy, which makes the original GR-Yaris steering wheel look so much better.

biggbn

30,136 posts

243 months

Might be my idea of a perfect daily road car. Simply brilliant

CrippsCorner

3,272 posts

204 months

I wish they'd introduce some nice colours! Crying out for a green or yellow, even a blue would be something.

KobayashiMaru86

1,841 posts

233 months

UnderSteerD said:
KobayashiMaru86 said:
Ideal to import. Quite a few places are and then there's no GPF to worry about. I'm tempted to when the Swift dies.
I had a cursory look at doing the same, but it seems there's no easy solution to getting the OEM dash to display the units we use in the UK. The answer appeared to be fitting an aftermarket speedo readout.

But it's definitely something I'd look at again if/when a decent solution arrives.
This is a concern of mine too. I don't understand why it isn't a case of changing the country in settings. On past Skoda's if you did this, say change it from UK to Australia, you'd get the digital dash in mph instead of kph and other things would change too, depending on the country.

Goatwidcoat

166 posts

58 months

Leon R said:
Less than £20,000 in Japan? That's amazing value.
It's mainly because the yen to GBP rate is the lowest it has been in over 30 years or something like that so the exchange rate is hugely in our favour. You can buy very nearly twice as much for the same £ as you could in 2016. I am planning a holiday to Japan in November and other than the cost of the flights - the hotels, food, attractions etc seem half price to what you would expect to be paying.

Their petrol prices have just jumped up 10% and with the exchange rate it is still only around 76p a litre.

Edited by Goatwidcoat on Friday 13th March 14:59

UncleGoat

63 posts

78 months

The Dash looks like a wheelie bin with buttons and a screen on it, 2005 Ford Mustang GT interior comes to mind, tragic

NGK210

4,571 posts

168 months

God bless Toyota.
And props for fitting actual knobs and buttons on the steering wheel, unlike Audi's £90k RS3, Ferrari's £320k Purosangue, etc, etc.