You Can Now Legally Bring Into the Country One of the Most Ferocious Sports Cars Ever Produced
View pictures in App save up to 80% data.
While measuring speed and acceleration is an empirical, objective pursuit, experiencing it is somewhat more subjective. The Bugatti Veyron was one of the first explosively fast cars that isolated the driver from the sensation of speed. EVs took it to the next level. Aside from the lung-crushing G-forces, you may as well be traveling by bullet train. Drive the new BMW M5 and tell us it's an engaging experience; it's not.
At the other end of the scale are cars like the Ferrari F40 and just about every TVR ever made. If the sheer visceral feel of speed is what excites you, then you may be pleased to hear that the mental TVR Tuscan Speed Six now falls under the US 25-year import rule. That means you can finally test your heart’s max BPM on the way to the shops each day and then down an espresso just to calm down.
If this represents your vision of a sports car experience, allow us to share some insights about one of the most ferocious sports cars ever created.
First introduced in 1999, certain early models became technically eligible for import as of last year. However, with the arrival of 2025, a wider selection of Tuscan Speed Six sports cars can now be imported. It's important to note that the 25-year import rule pertains to the specific manufacture date of each vehicle, rather than the overall production period of the model line.
TVR - The Genesis Tale
TVR's origins date back to 1946, when Trevor Wilkinson founded a modest engineering company known as Trevcar Motors. Shortly thereafter, the name evolved into TVR Engineering, and the company began to introduce a gradual yet consistent lineup of TVR vehicles. Like many small independent car manufacturers, TVR faced numerous challenges, including financial difficulties, acquisitions, and production hurdles. Nevertheless, each vehicle continued to embody the foundational idea of a lightweight tubular chassis paired with a front-engine, rear-drive configuration.
View pictures in App save up to 80% data.
Include CarBuzz in your Google News updates.
When Peter Wheeler saved the company from financial distress in 1981, he revitalized the brand and introduced some of its most iconic models. Cars like the Griffith, Chimaera, and Cerbera were all giant-killing sports cars, capable of challenging the fastest Porsches and Ferraris at a fraction of the cost. Build quality and reliability weren’t always a strong point, but every TVR made up for it with buckets of character and a soulful driving experience. The last cars rolled off the production line in 2006, but there have been attempts to reboot the brand in recent years.
With the history lesson concluded, let’s shift our focus to the newest TVR from this era that is now ready to be brought to our shores.
The TVR Tuscan Speed Six: A Featherweight Beast
The TVR Tuscan Speed Six was introduced in 1999 to join the aging Rover V8-powered Griffith and Chimaera. It was the third time that the Tuscan name had been used on a TVR, but this one bore the swoopy styling and futuristic interior design that marked this era of TVR apart from just about anything else on the road. Whereas major manufacturers had long adopted ABS and traction control to tame their sportier offerings, the Tuscan Speed Six made do with just power-steering to separate the driver from the true, raw character of the car.
For years, TVR had incorporated Rover's well-known V8 engine into a variety of its models. However, when the Tuscan was introduced, the company unveiled its own 3.6-liter straight-six engine,