Payne: 2025 New York Auto Show highlights
Posted by Talbot Payne on April 21, 2025
New York — The New York International Auto Show celebrates its 125th birthday this year and the auto-palooza has it all with a display of classics, concepts, supercars, race cars, electric vehicle test tracks, and outdoor off-road tracks.
Well, almost all.
Missing are manufacturers like BMW, Mazda, Cadillac, Jaguar, Volvo, Land Rover, Tesla and Rivian that decided to sit out the birthday party. Showgoers will still enjoy plenty of eye candy including the epic Hudson Yards development across 11th Avenue. With multiple skyscrapers (I swear a new one goes up every month) 9 million-square feet of office space, a mall, and more restaurants than Metro Detroit, the development has transformed Manhattan’s west side skyline.
No longer an isolated convention center, Javits-on-the-Hudson is part of a triangle of activity with Times Square to its northeast and Hudson Yards on its south flank. Inside are three floors of automotive toys.
Here are the highlights.
A (noisy) EV test track. VROOOOOOM! Sitting shotgun in a Dodge Charger Daytona, I was pinned to my setback as the brand’s first EV hit 40 mph after launch control before Graham Hooper — a Hollywood stunt driver — slammed on the brakes and rotated it through a series of turns. SCREEEEEE! “This is by far the most fun I have had in an EV! Ever!” yelled Hooper over the roar and screaming tires.

There are 18 EVs for showgoers to choose from on the test track. But only the Dodge EV has an external, so-called Fratzonic Exhaust Chamber that simulates the sound of an engine. A V-8 engine. The other EVs are silent. VROOOOM!
Bronco/Wrangler unbridled. If you want real V-8 sound, head outside to the Camp Jeep test track where you can jump into an insane Wrangler 392 and ride around the rollercoaster-like structure. Ford offers a similar Bronco Build Wild so you can experience its Bronc dirt-kicker. The rides pause at the top of the coaster hill so you can ogle the taller scrapers nearby.

Porsche 911 hot rod. Between the outdoor and indoor test tracks is a sprawling R2XPO display of modified cars. Front and center is a Porsche 911 (sixth, 997 generation) ready to be transformed on April 23-24 during public week by Japanese mod legend Akira Nakai using a wide-body kit and enormous, 13-inch-wide rear tires. Not only will the 911 get the Dodge Hellcat-like widebody, it’s been stuffed with a 650-horse, Chevrolet LS3 V-8 engine in back. Its a Porsche with a Motown accent.

125th birthday party. To celebrate, show organizers have brought 13 models representing 13 decades of automotive innovation. The lineup stretches from a 40-horsepower 1909 Cadillac Model 30 to a 502-horse 2022 Porsche 911 GT3. In the middle are a pair of silver, split-window, 1963 Corvettes. Yum. Other brands represented? Ford, Dodge, Mercury, Pierce Arrow, Mercedes, Pontiac, Chevrolet (a Volt in addition to the ‘Vettes), DeLorean, Acura and Bugatti.

The first Chrysler. Want more history? The first Chrysler made was the 2024 Six which, legend has it, Walter P. Chrysler himself drove to the New York Show in January 1924. It’s in the Stellantis display right next to the only Chrysler model built today, the Pacifica minivan.

Big Mack. The venerable truck company is also celebrating its 125th birthday. Mack was founded in 1900 by the Mack bothers in Brooklyn (now headquartered in Greensboro, North Carolina). The show celebrates with a restored 1925 AB model complete with 34 horsepower and solid rubber tires. The original customer? Ely and Walker Dry Goods Company in St. Louis.

Rolls and Bentley. Only in New York. Rolls and Bentley have their own stand between Honda and Toyota. The assembled $400k sedan, SUV and convertible chariots are waiting for the gazillionaires who occupy the Hudson Yards sky suites across the street.

Sports cars. Speaking of Toyota, the brand’s big disply has a football theme. The Japanese brand is the official car of the NFL, and flag football will debut as an official sport of the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. It’s the league’s nose under the Olympic tent as it intends to expand American football globally. Toyota isn’t the only pro sports league sponsor on the floor. Kia sponsors the NBA, Honda the NHL, and Chevrolet Major League Baseball.

Chevy Equinox. No, you’re not seeing double. There are two Equinox RS utes on the floor — one EV, the other internal combustion powered. They are distinguished by design — EV sleek vs. ICE chunky truck chic. Also different? The prices: The EV model costs about $13k more.

Super-ru. Japan’s wee auto company has the show’s most epic stage. Walk through the forest of trees and chirping (fake) birds and you’ll find a new EV (Trailseeker), updated EV (Solterra) and the big draw, the redesigned Outback station wagon. The latter was the talk of media week with its blocky design that screams off-road SUV. The all-terrain-tired Wilderness model looks like it could climb Mt. Everest.

Ford’s power pony. The Mustang GTD is a $300,000-plus, 815-horsepower rocket ship and the first U.S. stallion to record a sub-7 minute lap around the world’s most fearsome track, Germany’s 13-mile, 170-turn Nürburgring. Ford celebrates the accomplishment with a special display, and the ‘Stang looks like no other with its huge rear wing, front splitter and aero wardrobe.

King Corvette. Gotham is renowned for its exotic European car stable. This year you can feast on everything from a $3 million Koenigsegg to a $600k Lamborghini Reveuelto and $350k Ferrari 296. But stroll over to GM’s display and you’ll find a Chevy that will smoke any of them.
The $174,995, mid-engine ZR1 hypercar is the King of Corvettes with an insane 1,064 ponies and 233-mph top speed. Don’t expect that Mustang American Nürburgring record to last long.

K4 hatched. If the Chevy’s still too rich for your blood, check out Kia. The hatchback is sibling to the $23,165 K4 sedan that has been the Korean brand’s best seller this year. The hatch gives the compact a double threat in the market like the Mazda 3 sedan/hatchback or Honda Civic sedan/hatch. It shares K4’s Cadillac CT5-like styling, hoodless dash screens and engines — but adds 7 cubic feet of cargo space. Hey, Kia, how about a hot-hatch version to rival the new 2026 VW Golf GTI on display?

Italian stallion. The Stellantis-owned Italian supercar brand oozes sex appeal with a lineup of hotties including a purple GT2 Stradale. Translation: Road-going version of Maserati’s mid-engine GT2-class race car. This beast makes 631 horsepower with enhanced aerodynamics and scissor doors. New York cops ticket it just standing still.

Genesis Hypercar. Hyundai will enter the endurance racing wars in 2027 with the GMR-001 hypercar, South Korea’s first effort to conquer the high bankings of the 24-Hour Le Mans and Daytona endurance races. Look under its sleek orange skin and you’ll find Formula One-like keel wing aero tweaks and a twin-turbo hybrid V-8 to take on front-runners from Porsche Penske and Cadillac.

Hyundai family. Hyundai shows off its all-new, three-row, Palisade ICE SUV for the first time — alongside the (Big Apple) debut of its three-row, electric Ioniq 9, which was first seen in L.A. last fall. Like Chevy, Hyundai and Kia are committed to producing parallel ICE and EV lines to gauge customer preference. For now, the Palisade — available as a 600-mile-range hybrid for the first time — has the upper hand as one of the best-selling three-rows in the United States. “The only thing that matters to customers,” said Hyundai North America product chief Olabisi Boyle, “is how far they can go, and how easily they can get there.”

If it’s easy to get there, check out the New York Auto Show, which runs through April 27.
Henry Payne is auto critic for The Detroit News. Find him at hpayne@detroitnews.com or @HenryEPayne.