Lexus LC Production Reportedly Ends in August 2026 and It Feels Like the End of an Era
It was expected, but that does not make it any easier to swallow. A dealer communication shared through the Lexus enthusiast community indicates Lexus plans to wrap up LC production in August 2026, effectively closing the book on one of the most memorable grand tourers of the modern era. After a nine-year run and more than 15,000 units sold across coupe, convertible, hybrid, and special Inspiration Series versions, the LC is headed toward collector status by sheer virtue of what it represented: Lexus going all-in on style, emotion, and occasion.
We adored the Lexus LC 500 for exactly that reason. Its snarling naturally aspirated V8 brought a character you simply cannot fake, and the way Lexus carried the LF-LC concept’s drama into production is still a mic-drop moment in an industry that usually sands off the edges. The LC’s stance, proportions, and cabin ambiance feel like nothing else on the road, and Lexus was truly bold in committing to a concept-to-production silhouette that stayed faithful to the original vision. It is the kind of swing that builds legends, and the LC will go down as one of the greats in the GT and touring car realm.
There is another gut punch here, too: retiring the LC 500 also signals the end of Lexus’ 5.0-liter 2UR-GSE V8, an engine that has become a cornerstone of the brand’s enthusiast appeal. With the LC gone, Lexus reportedly exits the V8 game entirely, and it loses its flagship coupe from the lineup at the same time. In an era where performance is increasingly measured in kilowatts and software updates, the LC’s appeal was refreshingly analog in the ways that matter: throttle response, sound, and the sense that you were driving something built to stir you, not just transport you.
For owners, this is the moment you quietly smile every time you walk up to the car, because you already have what everyone is about to miss. For would-be buyers, it is the kind of news that tends to tighten the market and turn “maybe someday” into “better do it now.” Either way, Lexus deserves real credit for making the LC in the first place. Not every automaker has the courage to build a car this expressive, keep it as close to the concept as they did, and let a glorious V8 soundtrack be part of its signature until the very end.
