RE: Future classics of the '20s | Six of the Best
RE: Future classics of the '20s | Six of the Best
Yesterday

Future classics of the '20s | Six of the Best

Sometimes things aren't like they used to be - sometimes they're better


Toyota GR86, 2023, 17k, £29,995

You’d find it very easy - and be more than a little justified - having a whinge about motor cars in 2025. More assists and interference than ever, seemingly more traffic than ever, yet fewer fun new cars from which to choose. Those that are interesting are often prohibitively expensive. It can feel like quite a sorry situation. But help is at hand; while we’re only halfway through this decade, it has witnessed the arrival of some truly great performance cars. Cars that, thanks to their significance, look like fairly safe (as well as hugely fun) bets for the future. The Toyota GR86 ticks both those boxes as emphatically as anything else; still worth what they cost brand new three years ago, and with the kind of joy to the experience that makes you remember why driving is great. Neptune Blue was only offered on the first batch of UK cars, too.

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Ford Mustang Mach 1, 2022, 15k, £46,000

While everyone was very excited about the arrival of right-hand-drive Mustangs a decade ago, the S550 took a little while to come really good. A 2018 facelift sharpened the look and boosted power, so those later cars are really worth seeking out - the Bullitt in particular. But the best was saved till last, at least as far as UK buyers were concerned: the Mustang Mach 1 boasted some Bullitt bits (mainly the power upgrade), with some track-focused upgrades - extra cooling, stiffer bushes, revised dampers - to really make the most of it. The result was the best Mustang of the generation, keener and grippier without losing sight of the core appeal. That’s helped them retain a good amount of their value, with this 2022 car for sale at £46,000 - it was only £55k new. With the latest Mustang (and particularly the Dark Horse) now significantly more expensive prospects, the Mach 1 looks an even smarter buy than ever.

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Alfa Romeo Giulia GTA, 2021, 17k, £144,950

For the everyman enthusiast seeking out a modern classic super-saloon, this should probably be the standard Giulia Quadrifoglio, given it’s very nearly as powerful as the GTA and now costs from less than £30,000. But we make the rules here, and only derivatives launched in this decade qualify, so we’ll have to take the stunning limited edition instead. While it was easy to focus on just the extra 30hp, the Giulia chassis was totally overhauled as well, with 50mm wider tracks, plus bespoke springs, dampers and bushes. The Quadrifoglio was already pretty great to start with; the GTA sensational. This Etna Red example is notable for actually having been driven (17k under the teledials), and for being the (slightly) subtler regular GTA - no GTAm spoiler here. One of just five, apparently. A lot of money, for sure - see what else it buys further down the list - but unlikely to lose it either. Especially if an electric Quadrifoglio turns up…

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Honda Civic Type R (FL5), 2023, 10k, £41,998

A dead cert for inclusion, along with the GR86. And one to rank alongside the Mustang as potentially attainable for regular folk one day - the other three are a little pricier, for sure. But the Civic’s greatest achievement was convincing its driver that a front-drive Type R really could be worth the very best part of £50,000; it didn’t matter if the Honda was compared with a dedicated sports car of the same money, a rear-drive rival or an AWD rocketship, it could compete - surpass them, in many instances. The FL5 was brimming with such star quality as to be irresistible; not a whole lot better than its FK8 predecessor, if usefully improved across the board - an even sweeter shift, even better damping, nicer steering - to elevate the experience even further. A surefire classic, especially given it now seems Type R Hondas are done. And the Prelude ultimately sounds as exciting as Sunday school. 

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Porsche 718 Spyder RS, 2024, 37 miles, £149,950

It was hard not to be a little giddy at the prospect of the Porsche Cayman GT4 RS, the mid-engined 718 finally getting the GT3 power enthusiasts had always craved. And it was undeniably awesome - in the right scenario. On track, it was compelling; on road it was probably a little too fierce for its own good. Which is why the 718 Spyder RS would actually be our pick as a GT Porsche special for the future that could be used in any situation. It was just that bit more accommodating without losing any of the intensity, a slightly less hyperactive edge to the ride and the steering meaning it didn’t need perfect tarmac to feel like a near-perfect sports car. The roof is a faff, and the usual haters will tell you you ought to have bought a 911, but you’ll be having too much fun to care. And how good does a 718 look in Signal Yellow? 

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Maserati MC20, 2022, 6k, £150,000

There’s not a car here, surely, that adheres to all the future classic criteria quite like a Maserati MC20. Take a storied yet struggling carmaker for starters, add in a stunning supercar shape underpinned by a carbon tub, power it with a turbo V6 of unrivalled energy, make it drive like a Lotus and - voilà - new school, traditional supercar hero. With terrifying depreciation, perhaps as the market was unsure what to make of Maserati’s return, to secure its status as a cult hero. This one is less money Porsche and the Alfa, for heaven’s sake, with just 9,500 miles. The MC20’s future will be interesting to track; while the arrival of the MCPURA and cancellation of the supercar EV project suggest a reasonably rosy future, not very many of these halo models have sold. Volume products surely matter more to the bottom line than a great supercar. Even more reason, perhaps, to take a punt on a used relative bargain. 

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Author
Discussion

McRors

Original Poster:

387 posts

72 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Great selection of cars. It has to be the Honda for me, not because it’s cheap, or even good looking, but because of its real-world performance. One could make an excellent case for all them though.

AlpineA110NL

45 posts

41 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Difficult to choose between MC20 and the Alfa……but what a choice to make.

5lab

1,744 posts

212 months

Saturday
quotequote all
The mazer is famous for being way too lardy (200kg more than they claim?), and I suspect the gr86 will drop in price significantly when jap imports start flooding in. I suspect the pork and the Alfa will fare best

m62tu

74 posts

55 months

Saturday
quotequote all
AlpineA110NL said:
Difficult to choose between MC20 and the Alfa but what a choice to make.
At the moment, I agree. But in 5 years time, the GTA will appreciate another 50% while the MC20 will drop to 50k and will be deal of the decade.

howardhughes

1,244 posts

220 months

Saturday
quotequote all
For me, it would have to be

Maserati not 'mazzer'
Porsche 718
Alfa Romeo GTA

Alickadoo

2,976 posts

39 months

Saturday
quotequote all
I would be terrified to buy anything but the Toyota or possibly the Honda. Purely the thought of the cost of keeping them on the road.

cayman-black

13,139 posts

232 months

Saturday
quotequote all
I cant believe that lovely Alfa has 17k miles on it.

Frankychops

1,441 posts

25 months

Saturday
quotequote all
You can get the Porsche rs for £130k already, so you need to be prepared to loose some cash in the short to medium term, MC20’s start at the same price.

PH is looking for an instant £20-30k haircut some of its suggestions.

CG2020UK

2,658 posts

56 months

Saturday
quotequote all
While all great cars I don’t really see any of this list being classics.

Only one I’d actually spend money on is the Honda.

andy43

11,666 posts

270 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Porsche for me. Only because it’s yellow with silver wheels - it looks fantastic.

georgeyboy12345

3,945 posts

51 months

Saturday
quotequote all
No EV’s in the list?

Mouse Rat

1,972 posts

108 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Maserati
Alfa
Honda

Great list

CH80

173 posts

13 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Good selection. The Alfa and The RS for me, oh and the type R as well.

Twinair

879 posts

158 months

Saturday
quotequote all
After many twists and turns on the road to securing a ‘next’ vehicle, a step to a ‘real car’ - if you like. We got my son a GR86.

Wow - it’s as good as anything I’ve owned in my 60+ vehicle arsenal of many years in the journey.

Strong engine, but not silly power, deft & jinky and planted handling - all at the same time. Manual, engine at one end - drive at the other. It’s one of the very late cars. With Toyota servicing - it’s got the 10 year warranty.

My Boxster 25 is faster, obvs - but not that much ‘faster’ - and it’s more than double the price, of course, but it’s not more fun.

The best fun we have is I use my GR Yaris, he uses his ‘86 - we schlep across to caffeine and machine in train. Such fun..!

What the hell his outlook is for cars beyond the GR86? I really don’t know? Glad he has one and is getting that experience - he is 19.

So for me - on this list - it has to be the GR86.

Robertb

2,762 posts

254 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Huracan would get my vote… last of the NA V10s

Or maybe an R8 V10 manual, because it’s cheaper and manual which is likely to be more sought after.

GreatScott2016

1,905 posts

104 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Twinair said:
After many twists and turns on the road to securing a next vehicle, a step to a real car - if you like. We got my son a GR86.

Wow - it s as good as anything I ve owned in my 60+ vehicle arsenal of many years in the journey.

Strong engine, but not silly power, deft & jinky and planted handling - all at the same time. Manual, engine at one end - drive at the other. It s one of the very late cars. With Toyota servicing - it s got the 10 year warranty.

My Boxster 25 is faster, obvs - but not that much faster - and it s more than double the price, of course, but it s not more fun.

The best fun we have is I use my GR Yaris, he uses his 86 - we schlep across to caffeine and machine in train. Such fun..!

What the hell his outlook is for cars beyond the GR86? I really don t know? Glad he has one and is getting that experience - he is 19.

So for me - on this list - it has to be the GR86.
At 19, I had a VW Polo! smile he’s a lucky lad to drive a GR86 at 19, I’d hate to think of the insurance costs. Back to the list, I’d say the Alfa and Honda, but the Toyota does look like a great package.





pb8g09

2,826 posts

85 months

Saturday
quotequote all
I’d settle for a regular Alfa Quad than the special one and spend the difference on a more depreciated 4 litre Porsche on the side

sam.rog

1,109 posts

94 months

Saturday
quotequote all
The Honda and Toyota would make an awesome semi practical 2 car garage.

Not fussed about the others. Just don’t see the vfm in them.

Edited by sam.rog on Saturday 2nd August 09:11

Gad-Westy

15,764 posts

229 months

Saturday
quotequote all
m62tu said:
At the moment, I agree. But in 5 years time, the GTA will appreciate another 50% while the MC20 will drop to 50k and will be deal of the decade.
£200k for the Alfa in 5 years time? Not sure I’d agree with that, lovely as they are.

pb8g09

2,826 posts

85 months

Saturday
quotequote all
Gad-Westy said:
£200k for the Alfa in 5 years time? Not sure I d agree with that, lovely as they are.
I’d be using the Jaguar Project 8 similar vehicle as a vague predictor of what direction this would move in.