Forza Horizon 6 Car Tier List: Best Cars in Every Class Ranked for 2026
Forza Horizon 6 launched with 618 confirmed cars across seven performance classes — and picking the wrong one for the wrong event is the difference between winning cleanly and getting lapped on a mountain pass in Japan. This Forza Horizon 6 car tier list ranks the best vehicles in every class so you spend your credits on builds that actually win races, not on cars that look great in the garage but underperform on track.
This guide covers R, S2, S1, A, and B class, with top picks for road racing, drift, off-road, and general campaign use.
How the FH6 Class System Works — and Why It Matters More Than Raw Stats
Before the rankings, one thing needs to be clear: Performance Index matters more than stock stats. FH6 uses a PI rating from 100 to 998, combining top speed, acceleration, handling, and braking into a single number. A car rated 9 in speed is useless on a tight Tokyo city circuit if its handling score sits at 6. A car with 7 speed but 9.5 handling will win more races overall.
The new R-Class is the biggest structural change from Forza Horizon 5 — it sits above S2 and is dedicated entirely to track prototypes and factory race cars. If you’re coming from FH5, don’t assume your old class placements carry over. Lower classes have also shifted down roughly 100 PI, so check the stats screen before committing credits to any build.
One more thing the tutorial won’t tell you: a properly tuned A-Class car can beat an untuned S1 in the right event. Class placement is a ceiling, not a guarantee.
R-Class: The New Top Tier
R-Class is brand new to the Horizon series and the Ferrari FXX-K Evo (2018) is the most consistent pick in it. It offers the best balance of speed, handling, and braking across most circuit types and doesn’t require the extreme tuning investment that other R-Class cars demand to be competitive. R-Class cars do struggle on tight, bumpy Tokyo street circuits where their size and stiffness work against them — for those events, drop to S2.
S2 and S1 Class: The Competitive Sweet Spot
S2 and S1 are where most competitive campaign racing takes place, and both classes have clear standout picks that the community has already converged on in the weeks since launch.
Best S2 Cars
The Mercedes-AMG One leads S2 with a perfect 10 in acceleration and superior active aerodynamics that make it dominant on technical high-speed circuits. It’s the meta pick for S2 road racing and players who have Forza Horizon 5 save data receive it for free — a significant head start. If you’re prioritizing top speed over cornering on long straight sections, the Koenigsegg Jesko is the S2 leader in that category, though it requires careful tuning to handle correctly.
For drift-focused S2 play, the Lotus Evija Forza Edition is the specialist pick. It’s a Wheelspin-exclusive, so keep grinding for it if drifting is your focus. Don’t make the mistake of running your drift car in road racing events — the tuning trade-offs that make a car great sideways make it actively worse in grip-based races.
Best S1 Cars
The Nissan GT-R NISMO leads S1 with AWD traction and approximately 600 horsepower, giving it the best balance of grip and acceleration for campaign races. It’s the go-to S1 pick for most players and works reliably across road racing, speed zones, and street circuits without requiring heavy tuning investment.
If you unlocked the Mek My Day wristband event, the car reward from that event is an excellent early S1 option for Speed Zone challenges specifically, before you have access to higher-rated builds.
A-Class and B-Class: Where JDM Culture Lives
In FH6’s Japan setting, A and B class cars have a particular relevance — these are the classes built around the cars that defined Japanese car culture, and the game’s environment rewards them accordingly.
Best A-Class Cars
The 2020 Toyota GR Supra dominates A-Class for road racing. Its AWD traction and handling make it more consistent than RWD alternatives on technical routes, and it excels in purple-tier Speed Zone events specifically. In our experience with Forza Horizon 6, A-Class is where new players get the most value per credit spent — the gap between a well-tuned A-Class car and a stock S1 is smaller than most players expect.
For cross-country events at A-Class, the Dodge Viper GTS ACR Forza Edition and Subaru BRZ FE are the community picks. Acceleration and handling beat top speed in cross-country because you need to maintain speed through corners, not just reach it on straights.
Best B-Class Cars
The Toyota AE86 is the icon of Japanese drifting culture, and in FH6’s Japan setting it has never felt more at home. It’s the best B-Class drift car by a wide margin. For road racing at B-Class, the Subaru WRX STI offers lighter handling than the Lancer Evolution and performs consistently across surface types.
Dr Gamez has tracked FH6 community discussions since launch and one mistake keeps coming up: players chase the highest-class car they can afford and run it in every event regardless of circuit type. R-Class and S2 hypercars are dominant on fast, open mountain highways. They’re actively mediocre on the tight, technical streets of Tokyo’s urban sections where a tuned A-Class car with high handling stats wins more comfortably.
Match the car to the event type, not just the highest PI you can run. Use the recommended class for each event as a starting point, then pick the car within that class that suits the circuit layout. Speed zones want top speed and acceleration. Technical city circuits want handling and grip. Cross-country wants AWD traction and suspension travel.
The other mistake is ignoring tuning entirely. Stock stats are a baseline, not a final answer. Even a basic tune — adjusting tire pressure, lowering ride height, and setting differential bias — can move a B-tier car in a class to a genuine A-tier performer.
Forza Horizon 6 Car Tier List: Build a Garage With Purpose
The Forza Horizon 6 car tier list is not about having the most expensive cars — it’s about having the right cars for each situation. The Ferrari FXX-K Evo for R-Class circuits, the Mercedes-AMG One for S2 road racing, the Nissan GT-R NISMO for S1 campaign events, and the Toyota GR Supra for A-Class Speed Zones will cover the vast majority of what the game throws at you.
Invest in tuning over buying new cars once your class bases are covered. A well-tuned mid-tier car beats a stock top-tier car more often than the numbers suggest.
Which class are you focused on right now — and is there a specific car that’s been outperforming expectations for you in Japan?
