When the new Acura Integra debuted back in 2022, the reaction probably wasn’t quite what parent company Honda was hoping for. In the decade and a half since the nameplate left production, previous generations had become renowned, even beloved, by the motoring masses. Even though the new fourth-gen model managed to perform the minor miracle of offering a manual gearbox in a new luxury-brand car, the lack of a two-door version โ among other perceived faults โ meant fans were lukewarm to its debut.
First drive impressions of the new Integra only reinforced that mixed reaction. Even here at Gear Patrol, opinions have varied; my colleague Tyler Duffy found the car disappointing, even in stick-shift form, while I personally found it a stylish, compelling entry-level luxury option.
But here’s the thing: while the new Integra may be suffering under the impossible standards of living up to nostalgic expectations, the version at launch wasn’t meant to be the version that lived up to those hopes and dreams. Many people’s expectations were set not by the base car of yore โ which was always a glammed-up Civic โ but by high-performance versions like the Integra Type R and GS-R, affordable speed machines that became popularized by racing video games and second-hand ownership.
The successor to the legacy of those iconic cars is the Acura Integra Type S. The mechanical bits and bobs are largely familiar; they’re by and large pulled from the incredible Honda Civic Type R, much as the regular Integra borrows much from the Civic Si. But while the Civic Type R is no-holds-barred dedicated to performance, the Integra Type S aims to blend that same level of joie du conduire with the premium features that are to be expected with The Big A. To find out if Acura was able to pull that off, I headed off to Ojai, California to drive the car a few weeks before it hits the first owners’ hands in late June.
2024 Acura Integra Type S: What We Think
Fair or not, Acura needed to nail the Type S in order to save the Integra’s reputation โ and the brand pulled it off with flying colors. The Integra Type S delivers the same sort of incredible fun and snappy performance that characterized the Civic Type R and Honda’s other great driving cars, but builds on the Type R by offering better looks and greater creature comforts. Factor in the fact that it’s not that much more expensive than its hot Honda sibling, and the Type S makes a very compelling case for itself. In fact, it makes a strong case for being one of the best all-around cars a driving enthusiast could buy for $50,000 or so.
The Integra Type S design is one ace it holds over the Civic Type R …
If there’s a flaw in the Civic Type R’s armor, it’s arguably the car’s appearance; restrained though it may be compared to the previous version, which looked like a refugee from anime, it still is hardly what would be described as an attractive car. Its big air intakes and Boeing-scale wing certainly look purposeful, but ultimately, the looks are very much Civic Hatchback โ not a bad thing at $25,000, but a much less appealing proposition at nearly twice that.
The Integra Type S, however, managed to much more elegantly blend aggression into its design. The added width โ 2.8 inches over the regular Integra, with a 3.5-in wider track up front and a 1.9-in one in rear โ gives it a confident stance from just about any angle. It’s dialed up well beyond the treatment given to the other mainstream Type S models, the MDX Type S and TLX Type S, and all the better for it.