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Future Classic: 1992-1997 Subaru SVX

Future Classic: 1992-1997 Subaru SVX



Close your eyes and imagine a beautiful, Italian-designed coupe and you probably won’t picture something with a Subaru badge. But back in the early 1990s, such a thing was indeed a reality. The Alcyone SVX – named after the brightest star in the Pleiades constellation, which is seen in the Subaru logo – was a sleek two-door penned by Giorgetto Giugiaro, the man responsible for cars like the BMW M1, DeLorean, Maserati Bora and Volkswagen Karmann Ghia TC.

Subaru initially expected to sell 10,000 examples of the SVX annually in the U.S., but it never really caught on. By the time production ended in 1996, just over 14,000 had found homes, and in fact, all of the 1997 models were just carried over from 1996.

Why is the Subaru SVX a future classic?

In the U.S., the coupe’s name was shortened to SVX. It’s most notably remembered for its awesome window-within-a-window design, as well as its two-tone paint and slippery drag coefficient of just 0.29. Unfortunately, it’s also remembered for its exorbitant starting price of around $25,000, which was roughly $10,000 more than any other Subaru at the time. A fully loaded 1996 SVX LSi stickered for nearly $37,000, though it did come with amenities like leather trim, power seats and an electronic sunroof. Still, that's the equivalent of about $70,000 in today's money – more than twice the price of two brand-new BRZs.

The SVX was a relatively powerful coupe, with a 3.3-liter boxer six-cylinder engine producing 230 horsepower and 228 pound-feet of torque. Estimates at the time claimed the SVX could accelerate to 60 mph in around 7.5 seconds, with a top speed above 150 mph. Like most other Subarus, the SVX came standard with all-wheel drive, but it was exclusively saddled with a sluggish four-speed automatic transmission. In later model years, Subaru offered a front-wheel-drive SVX in an effort to lower the starting price, but by then, the coupe’s flame was dying out.