Skip advert
Advertisement

480bhp Nissan Juke-R revealed

Breed a Nissan Juke and Nissan GT-R and this is what you get: the crazy, pumped-up and road legal Juke-R

What happens when you cross a Nissan Juke with a GT-R? This isn’t the beginning of a car-themed joke, it’s a question asked by Nissan which its motorsport pals at Northants-based RML have answered.  The Juke-R is, in Nissan’s words, the ‘fastest, most exciting and daring compact crossover in the world’. With the regular Juke’s marketplace so tame, such a boast shouldn’t be too hard to achieve. But with 480bhp and all of the GT-R’s electronic trickery on board, this pumped up version should hang onto such bragging rights for quite some time. While development isn’t quite complete, two road-going versions of the Juke-R (one left, one right-hand drive) should be finished in November. Unsurprisingly, a production run isn’t planned and your local Nissan dealer won’t be very receptive to order requests. But an overwhelming public reaction could encourage Nissan to pump the Juke up beyond its current 187bhp maximum. For now, the Juke-R will be a PR machine, showing up at race meetings and key motoring events, with sprints up Goodwood Hill next July one date likely to be in its bustling diary. In short, it’s the drivetrain of a Nissan GT-R – the 480bhp twin-turbo V6 from the 2010-model car, plus its four-wheel drive and six-speed transaxle – shoehorned into the body of a Juke. It’s been a tough ask, too, with the mini-SUV’s body requiring much fettling to make its new mechanicals fit. Its wider track front and rear and its new 20in RAYS forged alloys have heralded some pumped up wheel arches, for instance, while the propshaft has been considerably shortened due to the Juke’s shorter wheelbase. Impressively, this has been done without confusing the GT-R’s complex computer system. The interior has also required an overhaul, the driving position forced back by the bigger engine while space on the dashboard has been cleared for the GT-R’s 7in LCD display screen. The Juke’s trademark motorcycle-inspired centre console is set to remain, though, despite the addtion of an FIA-spec roll cage and a pair of racing seats and harnesses up front. The RML team were responsible for the rather excellent Nissan Micra R a few years ago (read evo’s long-term experience of the car here) and we’ve every expectation the Juke-R will be just as accomplished. One of the RML test drivers even suggested its lighter weight and smaller footprint make it more fun and wieldy than a regular GT-R. We look forward to finding out for ourselves… Behind the scenes news on the Juke-R's development in evo 163, on sale Weds October 12 See more on the Nissan Micra R here We review the Nissan GT-R and Nissan Juke

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

The Peugeot 208 GTi is back: we've had a first look at the new £35k hot hatch
Peugeot 208 GTi
News

The Peugeot 208 GTi is back: we've had a first look at the new £35k hot hatch

Peugeot’s new electric hot hatch has been shown at the 2026 Le Mans 24 Hours, and UK pricing has come with it. Here are all the details
16 Jun 2026
New Maserati GranTurismo revealed – GT car updated to face Aston Martin DB12 S and Ferrari Amalfi
Maserati GranTurismo front
News

New Maserati GranTurismo revealed – GT car updated to face Aston Martin DB12 S and Ferrari Amalfi

Maserati’s iconic grand tourer launched in 2022 and is getting a nip and tuck three years on, with more power, a tweaked face and an off-road mode
18 Jun 2026
Why the ‘experts’ are completely wrong about buying a second-hand car
Used Bentley
Opinion

Why the ‘experts’ are completely wrong about buying a second-hand car

Navigating the absurd world of used car ads makes buying new seem sane, reckons Porter
12 Jun 2026