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Honda Civic Type R vs Toyota GR Supra (A90/A91)

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Honda Civic Type R (8.8) and Toyota GR Supra (A90/A91) (8.6) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 Honda Civic Type RToyota GR Supra (A90/A91)
Reliability & Durability 8.6 8.0
User Sentiment 9.5 9.3
Complaint Severity 8.1 7.9
Consensus Strength 6.9 5.3
Value for Money 6.5 6.7
Owner Advocacy 9.6 9.2
Honda Civic Type R

This front-drive hatchback delivers steering feel and chassis balance that embarrass cars costing twice as much, paired with a manual gearbox so satisfying you'll downshift just to feel it snick into third. The FL5 generation nails the daily-driver brief too, haul groceries, commute in traffic, then carve canyon roads on the way home without breaking a sweat. The tradeoffs are real: firm ride, road noise, a Civic-grade cabin at $50k, and a fuel tank that'll have you stopping for gas more than you'd like. But owners who sold BMWs and Porsches to buy this thing aren't looking back, because the driving engagement is that good. Buy it if you prioritize how a car feels over how it looks on paper; skip it if you need luxury refinement or can't justify the price without the prestige badge.

Toyota GR Supra (A90/A91)

This is what happens when Toyota borrows BMW's homework and actually improves it. The B58 engine tunes to 500+ wheel horsepower on stock internals, the chassis feels sharper than the Z4 it shares bones with, and it holds value like a limited-edition sneaker. The catch: 2020-21 models burned oil between changes, not catastrophic, but annoying enough to make 2022+ the smarter buy. The bigger question is philosophical: can you live with a Supra that's half BMW under the skin? If badge purity matters more than driving joy, walk away. If you want a reliable weekend weapon that won't depreciate into oblivion, this delivers, just skip the early years and prepare for dealer markups that'll test your commitment.