1997
Acura NSX

Starts at:
$84,000
Shop options
New 1997 Acura NSX
See ratings
Consumer rating
Owner reviewed vehicle score
Not rated
Safety rating
NHTSA tested vehicle score
Consumer rating
Owner reviewed vehicle score
Not rated
Safety rating
NHTSA tested vehicle score
Shop Cars.com
Browse cars & save your favorites
Dealers near you
Find & contact a dealership near you
no listings

We're not finding any listings in your area.
Change your location or search Cars.com to see more!

Change location

Available trims

See the differences side-by-side to compare trims.
  • 2dr NSX Cpe 3.2L Manual
    Starts at
    $84,000
    17 City / 24 Hwy
    MPG
    2
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2dr NSX Cpe 3.0L Auto
    Starts at
    $84,000
    18 City / 24 Hwy
    MPG
    2
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2dr NSX-T Open Top 3.2L Manual
    Starts at
    $88,000
    17 City / 24 Hwy
    MPG
    2
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2dr NSX-T Open Top 3.0L Auto
    Starts at
    $88,000
    18 City / 24 Hwy
    MPG
    2
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs

The good & the bad

This vehicle doesn't have any good or bad insights yet.

Use our comparison tool to look at this model side-by-side with other vehicles or view the full specifications list .

Start your comparison

Expert 1997 Acura NSX review

our expert's take
Our expert's take
By
Full article
our expert's take

You have to give Honda credit for keeping its Acura NSX alive.

In an era when many Japanese sports cars are becoming extinct (the Nissan 300 ZX, Subaru SVX, Toyota MR-2, etc.), ultra-slow sales of the low-slung NSX would have given Honda a legitimate reason to pull the plug.

Through June, just 218 NSXs have found homes, down from the 252 sold through the first six months of last year. And this year’s lower sales come despite a host of improvements on the 1997 model that was introduced in January.

But the NSX is Honda’s technical masterpiece, and even though it sells in tiny numbers compared with every other Honda product, it does bring a measure of prestige to the Japanese automaker.

It is – arguably – the only civilized supercar you can buy. Unlike a Ferrari, Lamborghini or some other exotic, it doesn’t need an army of mechanics and extraordinary maintenance to keep it running.

For those who can afford it, the NSX is a nice way to get from Point A to Point B.

PERFORMANCE, HANDLING

Honda offers the NSX with two V-6 engines. When you order the car with the four-speed automatic transmission, you get a 3.0-liter, 252-horsepower motor. If you chose the six-speed manual transmission, which is new for 1997, the car comes with a 3.2-liter V-6 that makes 290 horsepower.

Both engines are among the most advanced in the world. In addition to double overhead cams and 24 valves, this pair of V-6s features Honda’s Vtec valve timing system and Variable Volume Induction System.

The heart of the Vtec system – a Honda acronym for variable valve timing and electronic lift control – is a set of unique camshafts. One set of lobes (bumps on the camshaft) operates the valves for maximum efficiency when the engine is running a low speed. When the engine is revved to 5,800 rpm, another set of lobes on the same camshafts opens the valves. The second set of lobes maximizes engine breathing and horsepower by keeping thevalves open slightly longer.

The variable volume induction system ensures that the optimum mixture of fuel and air reaches each cylinder.

All this really means is that when you put the hammer down, the V-6 engine will respond with a space shuttle-like rush of thrust, and the car will rocket forward in the blink of eye. A recent road test in an auto magazine pegged the 0-to-60 mph times at just five seconds.

The NSX is one of the few cars that can do that without relying on a supercharger, turbocharger or 12 cylinders. In its own way, it is a highly efficient power plant. Few six-cylinder engines deliver this kind of performance while using fuel in what must be considered a miserly fashion for a supercar. In combined city-highway driving using the air conditioner most of the time, the NSX delivered 22 mpg gallon.

Because the engine can be revved safely to more than 8,500 rpm, I rarely shifted into sixth gear. I cruised at 70 mph on the interstate easily in fo urth or fifth gear with the engine nowhere near the red line on the tachometer. The car had enough muscle to move past slower traffic without downshifting.

I found the clutch pedal to be somewhat stiff, but because the shifter moves so precisely into each gear, the car is easy to drive.

Despite its exotic sports-car looks, the NSX is not a car that shatters your spine with a rock-hard ride. In fact, the NSX offers an extremely comfortable ride – when driven both slowly and at the extreme limits.

The NSX is outfitted with a double wishbone independent suspension system front and rear. The car’s body feels very stiff. The suspension system absorbs the energy without transferring much turbulence to the inside of the car.

This year’s NSX has bigger brakes and an improved electronic steering system. The brakes haul the car to a stop extremely quickly. Base price: $88,000.

FIT AND FINISH

When it comes to cars, Japanese automakers have been able to imitate and duplicate and improve, but they have never really learned to build a car with charisma, soul and personality.

I didn’t care for the NSX the first few days I drove the car. Leave it to a Japanese automaker, I thought, to sanitize and sterilize a supercar. Truth is, I later discovered, the NSX is boring only when driven slowly.

It doesn’t come alive and doesn’t have much of a personality until you take off the roof panel and drive the car hard. And even then something doesn’t measure up.

Perhaps the engine isn’t quite loud enough. Maybe the interior is somewhat dull. There is no unique NSX logo; nothing, in fact, to make the NSX feel any different inside than a run-of-the-mill Acura Integra.

The car also is lacking some must-have items. By the time you pay luxury and sales taxes, you are looking at spending a cool hundred grand for this car. For 100 large, I want a CD changer and remote door locks. Imagine dropping $100,000 on a car and being nickeled and dimed to death on the little things. The floor mats, for example, were an$85 add-on.

Those gripes aside, the NSX was built well, and it performed flawlessly.

Two latches inside hold the roof panel in place. It takes about two minutes to remove the roof and place it in its special holder on top of the rear-mounted engine. The panel can be taken off and reinstalled easily by one person.

The leather bucket seats were extremely comfortable and came with power adjustments. Even though you sit low, visibility is good up front and to each side. The rear view isn’t quite so good because the rear window is narrow.

The trunk offers a decent amount of room, but it is not very deep. It can hold a suitcase or a couple of small travel bags, but that’s about it.

The list of standard accessories includes traction control, power windows, mirrors and door locks, cruise control and automatic air-conditioning system.

In looking at the prices of used NSXs, the car doesn’tappear to be a smart way to spend a lot of money. A 4-year-old NSX can be bought for about $40,000 to $45,000.

Still, if you can afford it, the NSX is an enjoyable car to drive fast.

And, if you want a dependable supercar that you can pile on miles without fear of expensive breakdowns, the NSX is in a class by itself.

Specifications:

1997 Acura NSX-T

LENGTH Overall 174.2

FRONT COMPARTMENT Headroom 36.3 Legroom 44.3

WARRANTY Four-year,50,000-mile bumper-to-bumper; 24-hour roadside assistance.

MECHANICAL Drivetrain layout: Transverse mid-mounted engine and transaxle, rear-wheel drive. Brakes: Power-assisted four-wheel disc with ABS. Engine: 290-horsepower 3.2-liter V-6 with 24 valves and double overhead cams. Transmission: Six-speed manual.

OTHER MODELS N/A

Truett’s tip: The 1997 vers ion of Acura’s supercar is the best yet. It’s faster and more fun to drive than ever. But its very high price will keep it a rare sight.

1997 Acura NSX review: Our expert's take
By

You have to give Honda credit for keeping its Acura NSX alive.

In an era when many Japanese sports cars are becoming extinct (the Nissan 300 ZX, Subaru SVX, Toyota MR-2, etc.), ultra-slow sales of the low-slung NSX would have given Honda a legitimate reason to pull the plug.

Through June, just 218 NSXs have found homes, down from the 252 sold through the first six months of last year. And this year’s lower sales come despite a host of improvements on the 1997 model that was introduced in January.

But the NSX is Honda’s technical masterpiece, and even though it sells in tiny numbers compared with every other Honda product, it does bring a measure of prestige to the Japanese automaker.

It is – arguably – the only civilized supercar you can buy. Unlike a Ferrari, Lamborghini or some other exotic, it doesn’t need an army of mechanics and extraordinary maintenance to keep it running.

For those who can afford it, the NSX is a nice way to get from Point A to Point B.

PERFORMANCE, HANDLING

Honda offers the NSX with two V-6 engines. When you order the car with the four-speed automatic transmission, you get a 3.0-liter, 252-horsepower motor. If you chose the six-speed manual transmission, which is new for 1997, the car comes with a 3.2-liter V-6 that makes 290 horsepower.

Both engines are among the most advanced in the world. In addition to double overhead cams and 24 valves, this pair of V-6s features Honda’s Vtec valve timing system and Variable Volume Induction System.

The heart of the Vtec system – a Honda acronym for variable valve timing and electronic lift control – is a set of unique camshafts. One set of lobes (bumps on the camshaft) operates the valves for maximum efficiency when the engine is running a low speed. When the engine is revved to 5,800 rpm, another set of lobes on the same camshafts opens the valves. The second set of lobes maximizes engine breathing and horsepower by keeping thevalves open slightly longer.

The variable volume induction system ensures that the optimum mixture of fuel and air reaches each cylinder.

All this really means is that when you put the hammer down, the V-6 engine will respond with a space shuttle-like rush of thrust, and the car will rocket forward in the blink of eye. A recent road test in an auto magazine pegged the 0-to-60 mph times at just five seconds.

The NSX is one of the few cars that can do that without relying on a supercharger, turbocharger or 12 cylinders. In its own way, it is a highly efficient power plant. Few six-cylinder engines deliver this kind of performance while using fuel in what must be considered a miserly fashion for a supercar. In combined city-highway driving using the air conditioner most of the time, the NSX delivered 22 mpg gallon.

Because the engine can be revved safely to more than 8,500 rpm, I rarely shifted into sixth gear. I cruised at 70 mph on the interstate easily in fo urth or fifth gear with the engine nowhere near the red line on the tachometer. The car had enough muscle to move past slower traffic without downshifting.

I found the clutch pedal to be somewhat stiff, but because the shifter moves so precisely into each gear, the car is easy to drive.

Despite its exotic sports-car looks, the NSX is not a car that shatters your spine with a rock-hard ride. In fact, the NSX offers an extremely comfortable ride – when driven both slowly and at the extreme limits.

The NSX is outfitted with a double wishbone independent suspension system front and rear. The car’s body feels very stiff. The suspension system absorbs the energy without transferring much turbulence to the inside of the car.

This year’s NSX has bigger brakes and an improved electronic steering system. The brakes haul the car to a stop extremely quickly. Base price: $88,000.

FIT AND FINISH

When it comes to cars, Japanese automakers have been able to imitate and duplicate and improve, but they have never really learned to build a car with charisma, soul and personality.

I didn’t care for the NSX the first few days I drove the car. Leave it to a Japanese automaker, I thought, to sanitize and sterilize a supercar. Truth is, I later discovered, the NSX is boring only when driven slowly.

It doesn’t come alive and doesn’t have much of a personality until you take off the roof panel and drive the car hard. And even then something doesn’t measure up.

Perhaps the engine isn’t quite loud enough. Maybe the interior is somewhat dull. There is no unique NSX logo; nothing, in fact, to make the NSX feel any different inside than a run-of-the-mill Acura Integra.

The car also is lacking some must-have items. By the time you pay luxury and sales taxes, you are looking at spending a cool hundred grand for this car. For 100 large, I want a CD changer and remote door locks. Imagine dropping $100,000 on a car and being nickeled and dimed to death on the little things. The floor mats, for example, were an$85 add-on.

Those gripes aside, the NSX was built well, and it performed flawlessly.

Two latches inside hold the roof panel in place. It takes about two minutes to remove the roof and place it in its special holder on top of the rear-mounted engine. The panel can be taken off and reinstalled easily by one person.

The leather bucket seats were extremely comfortable and came with power adjustments. Even though you sit low, visibility is good up front and to each side. The rear view isn’t quite so good because the rear window is narrow.

The trunk offers a decent amount of room, but it is not very deep. It can hold a suitcase or a couple of small travel bags, but that’s about it.

The list of standard accessories includes traction control, power windows, mirrors and door locks, cruise control and automatic air-conditioning system.

In looking at the prices of used NSXs, the car doesn’tappear to be a smart way to spend a lot of money. A 4-year-old NSX can be bought for about $40,000 to $45,000.

Still, if you can afford it, the NSX is an enjoyable car to drive fast.

And, if you want a dependable supercar that you can pile on miles without fear of expensive breakdowns, the NSX is in a class by itself.

Specifications:

1997 Acura NSX-T

LENGTH Overall 174.2

FRONT COMPARTMENT Headroom 36.3 Legroom 44.3

WARRANTY Four-year,50,000-mile bumper-to-bumper; 24-hour roadside assistance.

MECHANICAL Drivetrain layout: Transverse mid-mounted engine and transaxle, rear-wheel drive. Brakes: Power-assisted four-wheel disc with ABS. Engine: 290-horsepower 3.2-liter V-6 with 24 valves and double overhead cams. Transmission: Six-speed manual.

OTHER MODELS N/A

Truett’s tip: The 1997 vers ion of Acura’s supercar is the best yet. It’s faster and more fun to drive than ever. But its very high price will keep it a rare sight.

Factory warranties

New car program benefits

Basic
4 years / 50,000 miles

Certified Pre-Owned program benefits

Age / mileage
6 years old and newer from their original in-service date, with 80,000 miles or fewer at time of vehicle delivery.
Basic
2 years / 100,000 miles
Dealer certification
182-point inspection

Compare similar vehicles

Select cars to compare for more detailed info.
  • 1997
    4.0
    Acura NSX
    Starts at
    $84,000
    18 City / 24 Hwy
    MPG
    2
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Rear-wheel drive
    Drivetrain
    Compare
  • 2007
    4.9
    Honda S2000
    Starts at
    $34,250
    20 City / 26 Hwy
    MPG
    2
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Rear-wheel drive
    Drivetrain
    Compare
  • 1998
    4.5
    Honda Prelude
    Starts at
    $23,300
    -
    MPG
    4
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front-wheel drive
    Drivetrain
    Compare
  • 2005
    4.6
    Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution
    Starts at
    $27,929
    19 City / 26 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Turbo Gas I4
    Engine
    All-wheel drive
    Drivetrain
    Compare
  • 2004
    5.0
    Acura NSX
    Starts at
    $89,000
    17 City / 24 Hwy
    MPG
    2
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Rear-wheel drive
    Drivetrain
    Compare
  • 1993
    4.7
    Acura Integra
    Starts at
    $13,190
    -
    MPG
    -
    Seat capacity
    -
    Engine
    -
    Drivetrain
    Compare
  • Compare more options
    Use our comparison tool to add any vehicle of your choice and see a full list of specifications and features side-by-side.
    Try it now

Consumer reviews

4.0 / 5
Based on 2 reviews
Write a review
Comfort 4.0
Interior 4.0
Performance 4.5
Value 4.5
Exterior 4.0
Reliability 4.5

Most recent

Amazing

The Acura NSX is one of the best mid-engine sports cars ever made. Reliable and fun to drive. Highly recommend for any true car enthusiasts.
  • Purchased a Used car
  • Used for Having fun
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 5.0
Interior 5.0
Performance 5.0
Value 5.0
Exterior 5.0
Reliability 5.0
1 person out of 1 found this review helpful. Did you?
Yes No

Great first car for my daughter.

Interior a little rough but all the important operations work. Has been reliable to date. The radio has volume problems. Other than that it is good to go.
  • Purchased a Used car
  • Used for Commuting
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 3.0
Interior 3.0
Performance 4.0
Value 4.0
Exterior 3.0
Reliability 4.0
0 people out of 3 found this review helpful. Did you?
Yes No

Latest news from cars.com

See all news

Acura dealers near you

FAQ

What trim levels are available for the 1997 Acura NSX?

The 1997 Acura NSX is available in 1 trim level:

  • (4 styles)

What is the MPG of the 1997 Acura NSX?

The 1997 Acura NSX offers up to 18 MPG in city driving and 24 MPG on the highway. These figures are based on EPA mileage ratings and are for comparison purposes only. The actual mileage will vary depending on vehicle options, trim level, driving conditions, driving habits, vehicle maintenance, and other factors.

What are some similar vehicles and competitors of the 1997 Acura NSX?

The 1997 Acura NSX compares to and/or competes against the following vehicles:

Is the 1997 Acura NSX reliable?

The 1997 Acura NSX has an average reliability rating of 4.5 out of 5 according to cars.com consumers. Find real-world reliability insights within consumer reviews from 1997 Acura NSX owners.

Is the 1997 Acura NSX a good Coupe?

Below are the cars.com consumers ratings for the 1997 Acura NSX. 100.0% of drivers recommend this vehicle.

4.0 / 5
Based on 2 reviews
  • Comfort: 4.0
  • Interior: 4.0
  • Performance: 4.5
  • Value: 4.5
  • Exterior: 4.0
  • Reliability: 4.5

Acura NSX history

Your list was successfully saved.
Your comparisons
 
 
 
 
Save list Compare