Nissan GT-R R32
1989–1994No active listings right now
Recent sales: $41,000 – $87,777After a sixteen-year silence, the GT-R came roaring back in 1989, and it returned as a monster. The R32 is the car that earned the badge its immortal nickname: an Australian magazine watched it demolish the local touring car series, dubbed it "Godzilla," and the name (which is possible the greatest car nickname of all time) has stuck to every GT-R since. It dominated Group A racing so thoroughly that it essentially broke the championship.
The hardware explains why. The RB26DETT, a 2.6-liter twin-turbo inline-six, was officially rated at 276 horsepower under Japan's gentleman's agreement, though the real figure sat comfortably north of 300. More important was how it put that power down, through the clever ATTESA E-TS all-wheel-drive system that fed torque to the front wheels only when needed, backed by Super HICAS four-wheel steering. That blend of muscle and traction became the template every later GT-R has followed.
The R32 is now the most accessible way into genuine Godzilla ownership, and as the first of the modern cars to clear the 25-year import barrier, it is the one that introduced a whole generation of overseas enthusiasts to the legend. My only advice is to double check its oil pump has been sorted. Buy a clean one, own the car that kicked off the modern myth.
Active Listings
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Get alerted when one listsRecent Sales(6)
Avg $53,088
1991 Nissan Skyline GT-R
Sold: $87,777
52,816 mi · manual · gun gray metallic
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1991 Nissan Skyline GT-R
Sold: $53,000
39,146 mi · manual · black pearl metallic
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1990 Nissan Skyline GT-R
Sold: $45,000
91,341 mi · automatic · repainted gun gray metallic
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1990 Nissan Skyline GT-R
Sold: $41,000
105,633 mi · manual · gun gray metallic
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1993 Nissan Skyline GT-R
Sold: $46,250
51,573 mi · manual · crystal white
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1994 Nissan GT-R
Sold: $45,500
81,399 mi · manual · white paint
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