Honda Spills Beans on Future Product, Shows Civic Hybrid

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

Looking ahead to the 2024 calendar year, Honda has laid out some of its plans for the forthcoming 12 months. While we’re sure they’ve still a few things up their sleeve (after all, the phrase “We can’t comment on future product” is a PR mainstay), the news does give us a good idea as to what’s in store – plus a shot of the 2025 Civic Hybrid.

Let’s start with that model, a trim which is sure to pad sales numbers in Honda showrooms as it continues its long-running battle with the Toyota Corolla, a car which has been offering hybrid power for some spell. Right off the bat, Honda is expecting big things from the Civic Hybrid, stating they feel the trim will comprise a full 40 percent of the models' sales when it launches this summer. 


For all you number nerds (*raises hand*), Honda shifted 200,381 new Civics in America last year, meaning they’ll need to sell about 80,000 of the things to meet their goal. In comparison, Toyota sold 232,370 Corollas - not counting the Cross - through calendar year 2023, of which 47,990 were hybrids. That’s just over 20 percent.


It is certainly possible that Honda will build to this target of 40 percent and force demand; after all, Civics tend to sell no matter what’s on the ground. Also, the hybrid powertrain is promised in both sedan and hatchback body styles, so that’ll help. We’ll be sure to keep an eye on this metric as the calendar flips through 2024. The entire Civic lineup gets styling tweaks for the ’25 model year, presumably like the ones shown in that hero shot above.

Elsewhere in the showroom, the Prologue is scheduled to land in the coming months, the Odyssey minivan is due for some tweaks, and a fuel cell CR-V is in the works for certain markets. Acura customers will find freshened MDX and RDX crossovers whilst shopping, along with the ZDX variant of that Prologue EV. 


Buried in the bumf is a line saying that a new Acura crossover will also debut later this year, positioned at the lineup’s gateway alongside the Integra. Any bets they’ll call it the IDX? Unless, of course, VW’s bloodthirsty yet bedwetting lawyers cry foul, in which case it may be called the ADX.


[Images: Honda]


Become a TTAC insider. Get the latest news, features, TTAC takes, and everything else that gets to the truth about cars first by   subscribing to our newsletter.

Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

More by Matthew Guy

Comments
Join the conversation
2 of 46 comments
  • Jalop1991 Jalop1991 on Jan 18, 2024

    Does Honda have the software team all ready to re-do the firmware so it disables the battery to save on warranty costs?


    Ford is anxiously awaiting the answer to that.

  • RHD RHD on Jan 21, 2024

    A hybrid with a 6-speed manual. Now we're talking!

  • SCE to AUX Maybe I should run out and buy my third EV in 12 years. No, I'll just keep the one I have.
  • Kjhkjlhkjhkljh kljhjkhjklhkjh So? 1 billion versus what? 60 billion or more in completely USESLESS CHIPS ACT money..? that 1 billion seems paltry and more useful than the chimps-act money giveaway to firms building plants in the US using YOUR tax dollars who require cpu grade silicon from CHINA (China supplies like 75+% of the entire worlds cpu grade silicon and Russia and Ukraine for CPU wafer processing grade NEON. And no, there is not a substitute country for that cpu grade silicon.Google:"U.S. Remains Painfully Dependent on China for Silicon and Solar Panels"Google:"mining-and-refining-pure-silicon-and-the-incredible-effort-it-takes-to-get-there" Google:"silicon production by country statista" Google:"low-on-gas-ukraine-invasion-chokes-supply-of-neon-needed-for-chipmaking"
  • IBx1 What savings? If you apply the brakes at all, let alone to successfully avoid a collision in an emergency, that gets flagged as unsafe driving.
  • Peter With a billion dollars we could have funded about 20 feet of trumps useless boarder wall.
  • Adam Right now it's giving up you data for " saving" but really we should receive a payment every time your data is accessed.Use a credit card? 3% backDrive your car? 3 cents per mileTurn on your TV to streaming? 30$ a month.
Next