GR Everything Except…
Toyota Gazoo Racing started out in 2007 as a motorsports project, then became its own division in 2015. Since then, it’s turned into a key part of Toyota’s identity. The GR badge now means something, whether it’s on a true performance car or just a GR Sport trim that adds a bit more edge to a standard model.
Toyota now puts GR or GR Sport badges on everything from hot hatches to family crossovers. Even the RAV4 gets a GR Sport plug-in hybrid, making it the most powerful RAV4 yet. The Land Cruiser 300, not available in the US, also has a GR Sport version in some regions, with tougher looks and some chassis upgrades.
Given that momentum, it seemed reasonable to expect the same approach for America’s revived Land Cruiser. Known globally as the Land Cruiser 250 or Prado, it slots below the LC300 but still carries serious heritage and capability. For now, though, that GR badge isn’t coming.
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Toyota Says Not Yet
According to a report cited by CarExpert, Toyota Australia has confirmed that a GR Sport version of the Land Cruiser Prado is not currently on the table. “At this stage, we have no plans to introduce a GR Sport variant for the Land Cruiser Prado,” a Toyota Australia spokesperson said.
That statement puts any hopes of a Land Cruiser GR Sport to rest, at least for now. It could have brought sharper looks, some unique suspension tweaks, and a few hardware upgrades, all without taking away from the full GR models.
A Land Cruiser GR Sport also would have made sense from a lineup perspective. If the larger, more expensive LC300 can justify a GR Sport variant, the smaller and more globally accessible Prado seems like an easy fit. For the US market, a GR-flavored Land Cruiser could have helped broaden appeal beyond traditional off-road buyers and into lifestyle territory.
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TRD vs GR, and Why It Matters
Part of the reason might be branding. In the US, Toyota has relied on TRD, or Toyota Racing Development, for its performance and off-road image. TRD trims and accessories already fill a similar role to GR Sport, especially on trucks and SUVs.
Toyota has been shifting GR into its global performance brand, while TRD becomes more focused on certain regions. The change hasn’t always been smooth. Recent news about the Camry TRD shows Toyota is still figuring out where each badge belongs.
For the Land Cruiser, keeping things simple avoids confusion. Whether that changes as GR grows is still up in the air. For now, the US Land Cruiser stays GR-free.
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