TL;DR
- The Car Pass costs $29.99 and delivers 30 new cars weekly from May 19, 2026 through December 2026. Each car can also be bought separately for $2.99.
- Eight confirmed Car Pass cars so far include the 2024 Koenigsegg Gemera, 1990 Nissan Skyline GT-R Group A, 2008 Honda Civic Type R FD2, and more.
- The Time Attack Car Pack costs $9.99 and includes 8 WTAC-spec race cars available from launch.
- Both packs are included in the Premium Edition and available in the Premium Upgrade Bundle.
- The Car Pass is included with Deluxe and Premium Editions. The Time Attack Car Pack is Premium Edition and Premium Upgrade only.
- Car Pass cars are exclusive — they cannot be earned through normal gameplay or the Festival Playlist.
Forza Horizon 6 launched with over 550 cars, but the garage does not stop there. Two DLC packs expand your collection further and bring some of the most unique vehicles in the game. The Forza Horizon 6 Car Pass delivers 30 exclusive cars across weekly drops throughout 2026, while the Time Attack Car Pack adds eight highly tuned WTAC-spec race machines available from day one. This guide covers every confirmed car, what each pack costs, how to access them, and whether they are worth buying.
Forza Horizon 6 is available on Forza.net, Steam, Xbox, and PlayStation.
Forza Horizon 6 Car Pass – What Is It?
The Car Pass is a premium add-on that delivers one new car to your garage every week, starting May 19, 2026. Over 30 weeks, it adds a total of 30 vehicles. These cars are exclusive to the Car Pass — they cannot be unlocked through the Festival Playlist, Wheelspins, Barn Finds, or any other free in-game method.
When you own the Car Pass, each new car is added directly to your garage automatically. You do not need to log in on any specific day to claim it. If you buy the Car Pass after it has already been running for several weeks, every car that has already been released is added to your garage immediately in one go. You only wait weekly for cars that have not released yet.
The pass runs until approximately December 8, 2026, based on the 30-week schedule from launch. After that date, all 30 cars remain available for Car Pass owners, and new buyers receive the full set at once.

Car Pass Price and How to Get It
The Car Pass costs $29.99 / £29.99 / €29.99 / AU$49.95 / ¥4,200 as a standalone purchase. Individual Car Pass cars can also be bought separately for $2.99 each, so if you only want one specific car, you do not need to buy the full pass.
The Car Pass is included automatically with the following editions and bundles:
- Deluxe Edition ($99.99 / £89.99) — includes the base game, Welcome Pack, and Car Pass
- Premium Edition ($119.99 / £109.99) — includes everything in Deluxe plus VIP Membership, Time Attack Car Pack, Italian Passion Car Pack, and two post-launch expansions
- Premium Upgrade Bundle ($59.99 / £59.99) — add-on for Game Pass subscribers or Standard Edition owners, includes VIP Membership, Welcome Pack, Time Attack Car Pack, Car Pass, Italian Passion Car Pack, and both expansions
The Standard Edition does not include the Car Pass. Standard Edition owners who want it must buy it separately for $29.99 or pick up the Premium Upgrade Bundle instead.
All Confirmed Forza Horizon 6 Car Pass Cars
Playground Games is releasing Car Pass vehicles weekly and has confirmed the first eight cars. The remaining 22 cars are being revealed progressively as each week’s drop approaches. Here are all cars confirmed so far with their release dates:
- 1990 Nissan #12 Skyline GT-R (BNR32 Gr. A) JTC — May 19, 2026
- 2024 Koenigsegg Gemera — May 28, 2026
- 2008 Honda Civic Type R (FD2) — June 4, 2026
- 1972 Datsun #269 Attacking the Clock Racing 240Z ‘All Carbon Hillclimb Beast’ — June 11, 2026
- 1998 Nissan Skyline GT-R 40th Anniversary — June 18, 2026
- 2023 Toyota GR Corolla — June 25, 2026
- 1974 Mazda #123 Mad Mike 808 Wagon ‘FURSTY’ — July 2, 2026
- 2023 Audi R8 Coupé V10 GT RWD — July 9, 2026
More cars will be confirmed week by week throughout 2026. The full 30-car lineup will be complete by December. Check back here as additional vehicles are announced.

Car Pass Cars – Why Each One Stands Out
1990 Nissan #12 Skyline GT-R (BNR32 Gr. A) JTC
This is not a road car — it is the Group A touring car version of the R32 Skyline GT-R that dominated the Japanese Touring Car Championship in the early 1990s. The BNR32 Group A was so dominant in the JTCC that rival manufacturers lobbied to have it banned. Race-prepared, stripped out, and fitted with a full roll cage and competition-spec RB26DETT tune, this is one of the most historically significant Japanese touring cars in FH6. It is the very first Car Pass drop, and it sets the tone perfectly.
For a closer look at how the Skyline family fits into FH6’s wider lineup, see our Legacy Cars and Loyalty Rewards guide.
2024 Koenigsegg Gemera

The Koenigsegg Gemera is a four-seater hypercar producing 1,700 hp from a hybridised three-cylinder engine. In real life, it is one of the fastest-accelerating production cars ever built, hitting 0–62 mph in 1.9 seconds. In FH6, the Gemera has a perfect Speed stat of 10, a Launch stat of 10, and an Acceleration of 9.7 — making it arguably the most potent Car Pass car released so far. If raw performance is what you are after, the Gemera alone arguably justifies the cost of the full pass.
For more on its in-game stats, see our 2024 Koenigsegg Gemera performance stats guide.
2008 Honda Civic Type R (FD2)

The FD2 Civic Type R is the Japanese domestic market version of the eighth-generation Type R, and it is considered one of the best front-wheel drive driver’s cars ever built. Its K20A naturally aspirated engine revs to 8,000 rpm and produces 225 hp. It is lighter, sharper, and more focused than its European counterpart. JDM fans have been asking for the FD2 in Forza for years. It lands in Week 3 of the Car Pass.
1972 Datsun #269 Attacking the Clock Racing 240Z ‘All Carbon Hillclimb Beast’
This is one of the most extreme builds in the entire Car Pass. Attacking the Clock Racing built this 240Z as a pure hillclimb weapon, with an 800 hp engine and a body completely rebuilt in carbon fibre. It is stripped, aero-loaded, and built for one purpose — absolute lap time. The fact that it shares the same base as the legendary Datsun 240Z makes it one of the most visually striking cars in the game. It drops the same week the Series 1 Winter season begins, making it a great Week 3 garage addition.
1998 Nissan Skyline GT-R 40th Anniversary
The R34 Skyline GT-R 40th Anniversary edition was a special production run built to celebrate 40 years of the GT-R nameplate. It features unique exterior details, a commemorative badge, and all the mechanical specification of the standard R34 V-Spec. The R34 remains one of the most iconic cars in gaming history, and this rare variant is a must-have for Skyline collectors. It arrives at the same time as Series 2: Horizon Decades begins.
2023 Toyota GR Corolla
The GR Corolla is Toyota’s all-wheel drive hot hatch, developed directly from lessons learned in WRC competition. It packs a 300 hp turbocharged three-cylinder engine — the same type of engine architecture used in Toyota’s WRC cars — into a compact five-door body. The GR Corolla is lighter than its competitors, grippier than it looks, and one of the most rewarding AWD hot hatches to drive on technical roads. It arrives Week 6 of the Car Pass, perfect timing for Japan’s mountain passes.
1974 Mazda #123 Mad Mike 808 Wagon ‘FURSTY’
Mad Mike Whiddett is one of the most celebrated drifters in the world, and this 808 Wagon is one of his most iconic builds. FURSTY is a rotary-powered, all-wheel drive drift weapon built in a 1974 Mazda 808 Wagon body. It is simultaneously absurd and brilliant — a family wagon running a high-output Wankel engine with competition drift tune. Nothing else in FH6 looks or sounds quite like it.
2023 Audi R8 Coupé V10 GT RWD
The R8 GT RWD is Audi’s farewell to its mid-engine V10 supercar, and it is the most driver-focused R8 ever made. Rear-wheel drive only, 620 hp naturally aspirated V10, stripped of the quattro system for a purer rear-drive experience. Only 333 were built for the road. In FH6, it is a high-end sports car that rewards clean driving and precise throttle control. It arrives Week 8 of the Car Pass, timed alongside the beginning of Series 2 Spring.
For more on Audi performance in FH6, see our guide on the 2016 Audi R8 V10 Plus stats guide and the 2021 Audi RS e-tron GT.
Is the Forza Horizon 6 Car Pass Worth Buying?
The answer depends on how you play. Here is the honest breakdown:
The Car Pass is good value if you plan to play FH6 throughout 2026, care about collecting rare cars, and enjoy building and tuning different vehicles across classes. At $29.99 for 30 cars, you are paying $1.00 per car — far less than the $2.99 individual car price. The Gemera alone is a top-tier hypercar that would cost much more to replace. If you are already buying the Deluxe or Premium Edition, the Car Pass is included at no extra cost, which makes it a straightforward bonus.
The Car Pass is less essential if you are a casual player who only logs in for a few weeks, or if you primarily care about the free Festival Playlist reward cars and the base game roster. The base game has over 550 cars, so you will never run out of things to drive. Some Car Pass vehicles will eventually reach the Auction House from other players after a few months, though prices may be high.
For players on Game Pass who are not sure about long-term commitment, buying the Car Pass separately later is perfectly valid. The cars released before your purchase will all be added to your garage at once when you redeem the pass.
Forza Horizon 6 Time Attack Car Pack – What Is It?
The Time Attack Car Pack is a separate DLC pack focused entirely on WTAC — World Time Attack Challenge — spec race cars. These are not road cars. They are purpose-built competition machines based on production vehicles, massively modified with carbon fibre bodywork, massive downforce aerodynamics, slick tires, and race-tuned engines. They are available from launch day and go directly into your garage.
The Time Attack Car Pack was built to complement FH6’s Japan setting and the game’s Time Attack Circuit events scattered across the map. These are the cars these tracks were made for.
Time Attack Car Pack Price and How to Get It
The Time Attack Car Pack costs $9.99 / £9.99 / €9.99 / AU$14.95 / ¥1,400 as a standalone purchase. It is included with the following editions:
- Premium Edition ($119.99 / £109.99) — included
- Premium Upgrade Bundle ($59.99 / £59.99) — included
The Standard Edition and Deluxe Edition do not include the Time Attack Car Pack. Unlike the Car Pass, the Deluxe Edition does not cover it. If you own either of those editions and want this pack, you need to purchase it separately for $9.99.
All 8 Cars in the Forza Horizon 6 Time Attack Car Pack
All eight cars are available from launch day. They are one-time additions — you receive each car once when you redeem the pack, and you do not spend any in-game credits to get them.
- 1990 Honda #19 101 Motorsport CRX WTAC
- 1992 Honda #21 Hardrace/JDMYard Civic WTAC
- 2001 Honda #33 BYP Racing Integra WTAC
- 2004 Honda #52 Evasive Motorsports S2000 WTAC
- 1990 Mitsubishi #269 Attacking the Clock Racing Minicab Time Attack
- 1993 Nissan #32 Skyline WTAC ‘Xtreme GTR’
- 2000 Nissan #36 Dream Project Silvia WTAC
- 1995 Toyota J&J Motorsport Supra WTAC
Time Attack Car Pack Cars – What Makes Each One Special
1990 Honda #19 101 Motorsport CRX WTAC
The CRX WTAC is a Honda CRX built for Time Attack competition, featuring extensive aero modifications, lightweight construction, and a highly tuned engine. The CRX platform is beloved in Time Attack for its low weight and balanced chassis. This is one of the lighter, nimbler cars in the pack and a brilliant choice for tight technical circuits and Touge racing.
1992 Honda #21 Hardrace/JDMYard Civic WTAC
The Hardrace/JDMYard Civic is a collaboration build between two of the most respected names in the Honda aftermarket. Running on full race specification with competition-grade suspension, brakes, and aerodynamics, this EG Civic is a front-wheel drive masterclass. It is one of the most popular WTAC platforms because the EG Civic is light, agile, and extremely responsive to tuning.
2001 Honda #33 BYP Racing Integra WTAC
The BYP Racing Integra represents one of the most tuner-friendly chassis in Honda history. Based on the DC2 Integra, this WTAC build uses a high-output Honda engine, race-modified suspension, and extensive aerodynamic work. The DC2 Integra has a near-perfect weight distribution for a front-wheel drive car, and the WTAC version takes that to its logical extreme.
2004 Honda #52 Evasive Motorsports S2000 WTAC
Evasive Motorsports is one of the most respected Honda tuning houses in the world, and their S2000 WTAC build is considered one of the best examples of the platform’s potential. The AP2 S2000 is already a celebrated driver’s car; converted for WTAC, it becomes one of the sharpest-handling cars in the entire Time Attack pack. Based on testing in FH6, it is the best Touge car in the pack, with a high handling score and exceptional responsiveness on mountain roads.
1990 Mitsubishi #269 Attacking the Clock Racing Minicab Time Attack
This one deserves its own paragraph just for existing. The Mitsubishi Minicab is a tiny commercial van — and Attacking the Clock Racing built it into a full-spec time attack competitor. Yes, it is literally a time attack van. It cannot match the pure pace of the Skyline or S2000, but it is one of the most entertaining and unique vehicles in all of FH6. Nothing else in the game looks like it going sideways through a corner.
1993 Nissan #32 Skyline WTAC ‘Xtreme GTR’
The Skyline WTAC ‘Xtreme GTR’ is the most handling-focused car in the Time Attack pack. Based on the R32 Skyline GT-R, it has been completely rebuilt for WTAC competition with extreme aerodynamics, track-spec suspension, and race-prepped mechanicals. It feels incredibly stable on high-speed corners and is one of the best cars for both Time Attack circuits and Touge battles in the game.
2000 Nissan #36 Dream Project Silvia WTAC
The Dream Project Silvia is the fastest car in the Time Attack pack based on in-game lap testing. In testing at the Hokovu Time Attack circuit, it recorded a 45.4-second lap — considerably ahead of the rest of the pack. The S15 Silvia platform is already well-loved in the drift and circuit communities, and the WTAC build turns it into a precision instrument. It is the standout performance pick of the entire Time Attack Car Pack.
For more on the Silvia family in FH6, check out our guides on the best drift cars and tuning setups.
1995 Toyota J&J Motorsport Supra WTAC
The J&J Motorsport Supra is a competition build based on the legendary A80 Supra, one of the most iconic cars in Toyota’s history. J&J Motorsport’s WTAC version features a heavily modified 2JZ-based engine, full race aerodynamics, and extensive chassis work. The Supra platform has a long history in Time Attack competition, and this is the definitive FH6 expression of that legacy. It is a fitting marquee car for the pack given the Supra’s cultural significance in Japan.
Is the Time Attack Car Pack Worth Buying?
At $9.99, the Time Attack Car Pack is very straightforward to evaluate. Eight unique WTAC-spec race cars, all available from launch, none available anywhere else in the game. For $9.99 that works out to $1.25 per car — excellent value for vehicles this specialised.
If you enjoy Time Attack circuits, Touge Battles, or precision circuit racing, this pack is essential. These cars are purpose-built for exactly those event types, and nothing in the base game matches their level of downforce and grip-focused tuning. The Silvia WTAC alone is one of the fastest Time Attack cars in the entire game. The Mitsubishi Minicab is worth it purely as a conversation piece.
If you only do drag racing, off-road, or casual road trips, this pack is less relevant. But even then, having the S2000 WTAC and Skyline WTAC in your garage as Touge options is never a bad thing in FH6’s Japan map.
For more on Time Attack racing in FH6 and what makes these cars effective, see our Lotus Scura Motorsport Exige WTAC guide and our tips on the best cars for Touge Battles.
Edition Comparison – What’s Included Where
Here is a clear breakdown of which packs come with which edition:
- Standard Edition ($69.99 / £59.99): Base game only. No Car Pass, no Time Attack Car Pack.
- Deluxe Edition ($99.99 / £89.99): Base game + Welcome Pack + Car Pass. No Time Attack Car Pack.
- Premium Edition ($119.99 / £109.99): Everything in Deluxe + VIP Membership + Time Attack Car Pack + Italian Passion Car Pack + two post-launch expansions + up to four days early access.
- Premium Upgrade Bundle ($59.99 / £59.99): All premium content (VIP, Welcome Pack, Car Pass, Time Attack Car Pack, Italian Passion Car Pack, two expansions) — does not include the base game. For Game Pass subscribers or Standard Edition owners.
For the full breakdown of every edition and which one suits different types of players, see our FH6 PC requirements and version guide.
Car Pass and Time Attack Pack in the Context of Series 2
With Series 2: Horizon Decades now live, Car Pass owners are already benefiting from an expanded garage. The 1998 Nissan Skyline GT-R 40th Anniversary (June 18), 2023 Toyota GR Corolla (June 25), 1974 Mazda Mad Mike 808 Wagon (July 2), and 2023 Audi R8 GT RWD (July 9) all drop during the Series 2 window — meaning Car Pass owners get bonus cars on top of the Series 2 Festival Playlist rewards each week.
The Time Attack Car Pack cars are equally useful in Series 2. The Dream Project Silvia WTAC and the Skyline ‘Xtreme GTR’ are excellent options for the B and A Class championships in the Horizon Decades playlist, and the S2000 WTAC is a Touge weapon that fits the mountain racing challenges perfectly.
For a full overview of what Series 2 offers and how to earn all its reward cars, see our Forza Horizon 6 Series 2: Horizon Decades overview guide.
Quick Tips for Getting the Most from Both Packs
- Check your garage weekly on Tuesdays. Car Pass drops arrive each Tuesday. Log in to see what is new.
- Do not buy individual cars before checking your edition. If you own Deluxe or Premium, many Car Pass cars are already yours. Always check the Collection Journal first.
- Use the Time Attack cars in Time Attack Circuit events immediately. These are the cars those circuits were built for — they will feel completely different to standard road cars.
- Tune the Silvia WTAC before taking it to Time Attack circuits. Stock it is already fast, but a proper setup makes it significantly more consistent.
- The Koenigsegg Gemera is a Festival Playlist beast. Its launch and speed stats make it competitive in almost any class when tuned down. Keep it in your active roster.
- Do not overlook the Minicab. It is a brilliant community car for events and the car meet. Bring it out on weekends.
For more on building and tuning your FH6 garage effectively, see our car tuning and mechanical balance guide, our best cars to upgrade and bodykit presets guide, and our full overview of the Forza Edition cars system.
Summary – Car Pass and Time Attack Car Pack at a Glance
The Car Pass and Time Attack Car Pack serve different purposes and different players. The Car Pass is a long-term commitment — a steady weekly drip of exclusive cars across 30 weeks that rewards collectors and dedicated players. The Time Attack Car Pack is an immediate injection of specialised track machinery that enhances specific game modes from day one.
Together, they add 38 vehicles to your FH6 garage that cannot be obtained through normal gameplay. At their respective prices, both represent fair value for players who will use them. The Premium Edition or Premium Upgrade Bundle remains the best route for players who want everything in one purchase.
For more ways to build out your FH6 garage without spending extra, check out our guides on Barn Find locations, our Wheelspins guide, the Auction House guide, and how to earn Credits fast to buy the cars you want from the Autoshow.



