Skip advert
Advertisement
In-depth reviews

Toyota GR Supra - interior and tech

A Toyota recipe with BMW ingredients. The outcome is a comfortable, well-judged environment, but small windows and dark trim leave it a bit gloomy

Evo rating
  • Agile chassis and polished powertrains
  • Lacks feel, feedback and bite; best class rivals are more capable

Stepping into the Supra undoubtedly feels special. The seating position is low-slung, with a dramatic view out through the pillar-box windscreen and over its long, curvaceous bonnet. It feels like you’re sitting over the rear axle, too, which is always an interesting attribute, while quality levels feel high.

It doesn’t half feel gloomy though. If the Supra is a Japanese car with German underpinnings, built in Austria, its interior design is equally confused, with a combination of shapes and elements that look sort of familiar, but with a definite Japanese overtone. Models built from 2022 onwards have been made available with a new beige colour theme, but overall the design is smart, straight-laced, and if anything a little dull, and too keen on the ‘stitching in plastic’ habit BMW and Toyota are guilty of falling into.

It’s not long before you start playing ‘spot the BMW bits’, either. The steering wheel is based on one of BMW’s older designs, but comes with a new (and overly large) steering boss and a thinner rim. The gear selector has the same BMW base with a new casing, and the minor switchgear and central infotainment screen are straight out of the parts bin, too. Still, the manual gearbox option won't be familiar to Z4 owners. Toyota redesigned the Supra's centre console to accommodate the new shift leaver, which gives the cabin a slightly more bespoke touch.

Advertisement - Article continues below

The overall shape of the dashboard is pleasing enough, and the instrument cluster is more unique. We’ve found its tachometer needle a little difficult to see, but otherwise it’s all clear enough. The seats are great, too, both supportive (particularly in the standard car with grippy Alcantara) and comfortable.

There’s very little to complain about here in terms of tech or interfaces. The iDrive-style controller is effective, the shortcut buttons useful, and the menus easy to navigate. For that matter, the physical controls for the heating and ventilation are similarly useful.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Best cheap supercars – used exotics and rarities for less than a Porsche 911
Best cheap supercars
Best cars

Best cheap supercars – used exotics and rarities for less than a Porsche 911

New cars are more egregiously expensive than ever, making a silver-haired supercar for hot hatch money extraordinarily tempting
23 May 2025
The new BMW M2 CS is just around the corner: here’s everything we know
BMW M2 CS spy shot – front
News

The new BMW M2 CS is just around the corner: here’s everything we know

The G87 M2 is a strong performer in standard guise, but the CS treatment is set to bring more focus still to the hot coupe
22 May 2025
BMW might be about to revive the Z3 M Coupe ‘clownshoe’
BMW Z3 M Coupe teaser
News

BMW might be about to revive the Z3 M Coupe ‘clownshoe’

A new Z3 M-inspired shooting brake will be unveiled at Concorso d'Eleganza Villa d'Este later this month – here’s a sneak peek
20 May 2025