I recently spent way too many hours and about 2,200 miles in a 2026 , and needless to say, I learned a few things. All that good, juicy stuff is coming later, though one odd thing stood out, so I looked into it right away: it has a gas cap.
Shocking, right? After spending over half a year with a and getting in and out of other Honda models for various tests, I grew accustomed to not having to remove a gas cap after opening the fuel filler door at the gas station. You can imagine the shock when I went to pump gas in the Prelude for the first time, and, tuh duh!
I asked Honda about it, and they reached out to R&D in Japan. As a result, I have an answer for why the Prelude has a gas cap while most other Hondas don’t (the only other Honda sold in the U.S. with a gas cap is the Civic Type R), and there’s a neat reason why.
M. Burnam
It comes down to two things: the chassis and the low-volume production nature of the two cars. According to a Honda spokesperson, the Prelude chassis is “common” with the Civic Type R, and “some global markets necessitate a fuel cap due to unique fuel filler standards. For smaller-volume models like CTR and Prelude, a single product spec is created.” That’s pretty straightforward and easy to understand; however, manufacturing streamlining isn’t the only reason.
It’s already known that the Prelude shares the same front end as the Type R, which is why it has such glorious handling. But while looking at the spec sheets for both cars, I realized they have identical front and rear track widths. If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, then it must be a…
I went back to Honda a second time, asking specifically whether the Prelude was essentially a coupe body riding on the Type R chassis, whether the two also shared the same rear suspension, and which other components they shared. As it turns out, it’s quite a few.
“The Prelude leverages the core hardware and engineering of the Type R, but it is not identical; it has been specifically tuned to deliver its own unique character,” a Honda spokesperson told The Drive. “Sharing the chassis with the CTR does not mean the chassis is completely identical, but rather that it shares the underlying platform architecture, suspension design, and key hardware systems.”
Honda
The key bit there is “architecture” and “design.” Of course, I haven’t (and won’t) strip either car to find out just how similar the two really are, but having spent considerable miles in both models, the essence of Type R clearly lives in the Prelude. The same goes for the Prelude’s rear suspension, which, according to Honda, “uses a multi-link rear suspension derived from the Type R but is not a complete carryover.” However, it shares several key components, including the rigid-mounted subframe, control arm configuration, and hub carrier. Like with the front, the rear spring rates, anti-roll bar, and some bushings are tuned specifically for the hybrid coupe.
Besides the fuel filler door (and other hardware impacted by the wider track and fenders) and the bits mentioned above, the two cars also share the same adaptive damper system, dual-pinion electric power steering, and Brembo brakes. Of course, the tuning of these components is very different between cars, given their attitudes and purposes. That said, Honda did highlight that the steering ratio is 3% quicker on the Prelude than the Type R. Interesting.
So there you have it—there’s a lot more between these two cars than meets the eye, and quite a bit more than Honda originally divulged. As far as I’m concerned, they’re both amazing at what they do, but I won’t say too much more about my time in the Prelude just yet.