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What's Next for the New Mustang? Future Performance Variants

Photo credit: Michael Simari - Car and Driver
Photo credit: Michael Simari - Car and Driver
  • The new 2024 Ford Mustang arrives with a more powerful Dark Horse edition with around 500 hp, but we expect even more performance models to arrive in the future.

  • A Shelby GT500 has topped the range for the past two generations, so it seems like a good bet that the seventh generation will also receive a Shelby-branded flagship.

  • The Bullitt will likely make a return, while the Boss 302 nameplate could be brought back for the first time since 2012.

The seventh generation of the Ford Mustang has finally arrived packing the familiar Coyote 5.0-liter V-8, and while Ford hasn't revealed horsepower figures just yet, we expect the 2024 Mustang to improve on the outgoing GT model's 450 ponies. Ford has also unveiled a special performance edition right off the bat, with the Dark Horse taking the 5.0-liter up to a projected 500 horsepower and linking the motor to a standard six-speed Tremec manual gearbox. But the Dark Horse won't be the only high-performance Mustang for this seventh generation, and Ford has a rich history of special Stangs to draw upon for its latest iteration.

Photo credit: Michael Simari - Car and Driver
Photo credit: Michael Simari - Car and Driver

Odes to Internal Combustion

Ford has confirmed that 2022 will be the final model year for the Shelby GT500, powered by the Predator supercharged 5.2-liter V-8 with a monstrous 760 horsepower and 625 pound-feet of torque. But since the previous two generations have offered a Shelby-badged model from the factory, we believe the GT500 will make a return, likely pumping out even more power and even wilder looks than the current chiseled and bewinged GT500. The next Shelby-branded model could arrive closer to the end of the seventh generation's production run, possibly as an ode to the internal-combustion engine before emissions regulations put it out to pasture.

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Along with a GT500, we predict a lesser performance model will slot in between the GT and the Shelby. The Mach 1, which eked an extra 20 hp out of the GT's V-8 for a 470-hp sum, will continue for 2023 as a final vestige of the sixth generation. We don't expect the Mach 1 trim to return anytime soon on the new version, since it had been on a 17-year hiatus before being relaunched in 2021.

Photo credit: Ford
Photo credit: Ford

Instead, the Dark Horse seems to be taking over the midrange performance Mustang's spot. We would also bet on a return for the Bullitt, which has appeared on the last three generations of Mustangs, dating back to 2001. The sixth-generation Bullitt turned the Coyote engine up to 480 hp and matched that with understated looks, and a seventh-generation Bullitt would probably ring in around 500 hp.

Photo credit: THE MANUFACTURER
Photo credit: THE MANUFACTURER

Is the Boss Coming Back?

We also think the Boss 302 nameplate could be revived. It reappeared in 2012 on the fifth-generation model, producing 32 more horsepower than the GT of the time and featuring a six-speed manual and a revised suspension, but also a stripped-back interior. It's due for a comeback and could act as a more basic, track-focused model underneath the Dark Horse. The Dark Horse nameplate might also spread to the electric Mustang Mach-E crossover, as a step between the 346-hp models and the 480-hp GT.

Time will tell which of our predictions will come true, but at the moment we are simply happy that the V-8 American icon is living on for another generation.

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