NSX generation
Honda NSX NA2 for sale
NSX listings cover NA1 (1990-1997) and NA2 (1997-2005). Honda's mid-engine V6 platform. Type R variants appeared in both NA1 and NA2 generations.
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1991 Honda Beat
Japan$6,324CA$8,963£4,729A$9,124€5,541¥1,027,780TCV (tradecarview)
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2001 Honda Accord
Japan$7,697CA$10,909£5,755A$11,104€6,744¥1,250,921TCV (tradecarview)
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2001 Honda S2000
Japan$14,041CA$19,900£10,499A$20,257€12,302¥2,281,952TCV (tradecarview)
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1996 Honda Integra
Japan$31,451CA$44,575£23,517A$45,374€27,555¥5,111,436TCV (tradecarview)
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2009 Honda CR-V
AB, Canada$6,703CA$9,500£5,012A$9,670€5,873¥1,089,376JDM Connection
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2006 Honda Civic
Auckland, New Zealand$6,275CA$8,894£4,692A$9,053€5,498¥1,019,817Reliable Performance Motors
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1995 Honda Acty
HI, USA$10,495CA$14,875£7,848A$15,141€9,195¥1,705,654JDM Hawaii
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2001 Honda Vamos
SC, USA$9,950CA$14,102£7,440A$14,355€8,718¥1,617,080Japan Direct Motors
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History & specs
About the Honda NSX NA2
The Honda NSX was produced across two distinct generations: the NA1/NA2 (1990–2005) and the NC1 (2016–2022). The first generation used an all-aluminum monocoque body in a mid-engine, rear-wheel-drive layout assembled by specialist teams in Tochigi; the NA1 ran from 1990 through 1996/1997 depending on market, while the NA2 introduced the larger-displacement engine in 1997 and continued through 2005. A 2002 facelift replaced the pop-up headlamps with fixed HID units and revised the rear track width. In North America, the first generation was sold as the Acura NSX. The second-generation NC1 (2016–2022) was built in Ohio and sold exclusively as the Acura NSX globally. Combined first-generation production is estimated at approximately 18,000 units; NC1 production is estimated at approximately 2,900 units.
The NA1 uses the C30A 3.0L DOHC VTEC V6, rated at 270ps in JDM specification, paired with a 5-speed manual or 4-speed automatic. The NA2 carries the C32B 3.2L DOHC VTEC V6 at 280ps in JDM specification with a 6-speed close-ratio manual. Japan-market trim variants include the Type R (available for both NA1 and NA2, weight-reduced with Recaro seats, no air conditioning, and reinforced suspension), the Type S and Type S-Zero (NA2, lighter than base with sport suspension and close-ratio gearing), and the NSX-T targa (available across both chassis codes with a removable roof panel requiring additional body bracing). The 1999 Zanardi Edition was a US-market limited variant with BBS wheels and manual-only specification. The NC1 uses the JNC1 3.5L twin-turbocharged V6 combined with three electric motors producing 573hp as a system (base trim) or 600hp in the 2022 Type S, routed through a 9-speed dual-clutch transaxle with front-and-rear torque vectoring AWD.
First-generation NA1 models built from 1990 are US-eligible under the 25-year FMVSS rule from 2015 onward; the full NA2 production run through 2005 clears eligibility progressively through 2030. The NC1 (2016–2022) falls outside the current import window. The NSX was produced in right-hand drive throughout both first-generation chassis codes. Pre-purchase inspection priorities on NA1/NA2 examples include: confirming timing belt and water pump service records (interval approximately 7 years or 105,000 miles on C30A/C32B); a full cooling system check covering radiator end-tank condition, hoses, and thermostat function, as overheating risk rises with deferred maintenance; clutch engagement feel and transmission synchro behavior in 2nd and 3rd gear; ABS system self-test for the documented wheel-speed sensor failure pattern; AC compressor condition, particularly on 1991–1992 examples where a documented evaporator failure rate requires full system replacement; and a paint-meter and lift inspection for aluminum body repair, as the all-aluminum structure is difficult to restore correctly after significant impact and specialist facilities are uncommon.