The 2025 Ford Mustang GTD Is a Horse of a Different Feather

Tim Healey
by Tim Healey

The Ford Mustang has always been known for affordable -- or affordable-ish -- performance. The newest vehicle in the pony-car lineup will be priced not to compete with Camaros and Chargers but single-family homes. Meet the $300,000 Mustang -- the 2025 Ford Mustang GTD.


This limited-edition Mustang is street-legal, though it has been designed in conjunction with the Mustang GT3 race car -- a car that is slated to run at the 24 Hours of Le Mans next year.

The body uses lots of carbon fiber, and the short-long arm front/multi-link rear suspension can adjust ride height and spring rates depending on whether you're driving on the street or track -- the car will ride almost 40 mm lower when you're doing track laps. The car's track is almost 4 inches wider than that of the Mustang GT.

The GTD has available "active aerodynamics" -- we expect we'll get more specifics on what that means later -- and a supercharged 5.2-liter V8 to go along with an eight-speed dual-clutch rear transaxle and carbon-fiber driveshaft.

Other standard or available features include a dry-sump oil system, magnesium wheels, titanium exhaust, and carbon-ceramic brakes.

Ford is aiming for 800 horsepower, which will be the most horsepower ever on a street-legal Mustang, and a Nürburgring time of under 7 minutes.

Aero bits include a front splitter, a hydraulically-controlled rear wing, and a vented hood and fenders. The fenders, hood, rear cover that replaces the trunk, door sills, front splitter, rear diffuser, and roof are all carbon fiber. The front and rear fascias can be optioned as carbon fiber, as well.

Ford is touting that this car will have tech that's outlawed in racing, such as hydraulically-controlled front flaps that manage airflow.

In lieu of a trunk, that space is now occupied by the rear suspension, a hydraulic control system, and the cooling system for the transaxle. Two scoops funnel air toward heat exchangers to help keep things cool.

The overarching goal here is to get as much downforce as possible.

The V8 has dual air inlets and a redline over 7,500 RPM. A titanium active-valve exhaust system will be available.

Apparently the car isn't mid-engined, as has been speculated, but the rear transaxle will help it get close to a 50/50 weight distribution. The rear subframe is tubular.

Tires are 325 mm in the front and 345 mm in the rear and mounted to 20-inch wheels. Aluminum wheels are standard and magnesium wheels are optional.

Putting a stop the proceedings are carbon-ceramic Brembo brakes, and the GTD has cooling ducts for the rears.

Drivers will be able to adjust the Variable Traction Control via steering-wheel button while hot-lapping. The cabin features Recaro seats and a mixture of suede, leather, and carbon-fiber materials. There will be digital displays galore, and over-the-air updates for the electronics will be part of the deal. Say bye-bye to the rear seat, which is jettisoned to save weight. Three-dimensionally printed titanium materials that come from retired military jets are available for the paddle shifters, the main transmission shifter, and the serial plate.

Exterior color choices are basically limitless -- Ford says it can even match a color sample.

Well-heeled weekend warriors, as well as car collectors, can get their hands on a GTD in either late 2024 or early 2025.

We'd make a Cars and Coffee joke, but we suspect most buyers will be spending their Sunday mornings on the track. The rest will put probably, sadly, park this car in a climate-controlled garage.

We hope those who can afford this car put it through its paces. At the very least, we suspect a lot of pictures of this racecar for the street will be decorating the bedrooms of young car enthusiasts everywhere.

[Images: Ford]

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Tim Healey
Tim Healey

Tim Healey grew up around the auto-parts business and has always had a love for cars — his parents joke his first word was “‘Vette”. Despite this, he wanted to pursue a career in sports writing but he ended up falling semi-accidentally into the automotive-journalism industry, first at Consumer Guide Automotive and later at Web2Carz.com. He also worked as an industry analyst at Mintel Group and freelanced for About.com, CarFax, Vehix.com, High Gear Media, Torque News, FutureCar.com, Cars.com, among others, and of course Vertical Scope sites such as AutoGuide.com, Off-Road.com, and HybridCars.com. He’s an urbanite and as such, doesn’t need a daily driver, but if he had one, it would be compact, sporty, and have a manual transmission.

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4 of 74 comments
  • Oberkanone Oberkanone on Aug 18, 2023

    It's exceptionally hideous appearance. It's a racecar that is street legal. Impressive performance in an ugly wrapper.

    • Alan Alan on Aug 18, 2023

      Once behind the wheel you can't see the headlights.


  • Art_Vandelay Art_Vandelay on Aug 20, 2023

    The haters should just wait for the new Challenger or Camaro

  • Redapple2 Raise the gas tax ~~ $2-3 /gallon -slowly- over the next 4-6 yrs. This will have 10X the pollution VS compulsory BEVs. Some one should write a story on this.
  • 1995 SC If they are bending over the company who's name was on the building, I shudder to think how bad the customers were getting it there.
  • SCE to AUX Sounds like recalibrated sensors are needed.
  • SCE to AUX "Unfortunately, this has left many with product lineups overloaded with models loads of households can no longer afford."So what - as long as enough households can afford them, the mfrs don't need to care if everyone can afford them.The rest of this article is the usual omnibus rant about everything wrong in the auto industry right now - dealers, data spying, prices, EV challenges, regulation, etc.As for road taxes - the government(s) need to look in the mirror. Rising CAFE rules have eroded pump taxes for decades, and the Federal gas tax hasn't changed since 1993. PA (my state) with the highest gas tax in the US, still has some of the worst roads thanks to road quantity, geography, and weather.The tax should be: (GVWR x annual miles), so that everyone pays. Determining your annual mileage isn't hard to do. This would also incentive people to buy smaller/lighter vehicles.
  • Wjtinfwb No car ever looked more different and less desirable than the Supra L. Where the Supra with the flares, big wheels and the wing looked aggressive, robust, sporting but upmarket and expensive, the L looked, sad. basically a stretched Celica with a 6 cylinder, it looked like it and was quickly forgotten in the marketplace. This one looks like its lived a rough life, probably will run forever but that doesn't mean you'll want it to.
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