Used Nissan Silvia Cars for Sale
SAT Japan stocks used Nissan Silvias direct from Japanese auctions. The current rotation typically includes S13, S14, and S15 examples in both turbocharged SR20DET and naturally aspirated SR20DE trims, though specific availability comes and goes with auction supply. Every car ships with its auction grade sheet, verified mileage history, and export paperwork sorted for delivery to your nearest port.
Nissan Silvia buying guide
Quick facts
Production years: 1965 to 2002 across seven generations
Most popular generations: S13 (1988 to 1994), S14 (1993 to 1998), S15 (1999 to 2002)
Primary engine: SR20DET 2.0 liter turbocharged inline four (S13 to S15)
Drivetrain: Rear wheel drive
Weight distribution: Approximately 50:50 front to rear
Factory horsepower range: 205 hp (S13) to 247 hp (S15 Spec-R)
2026 price range: $10,000 to $90,000 depending on generation and condition
Best known for: Drifting heritage, the SR20DET engine, the touge runs of Keiichi Tsuchiya
Nissan built seven generations of Silvia between 1965 and 2002, but for international buyers in 2026, only three really matter. The S13, S14, and S15 are what most shoppers come looking for. Those are the generations where Nissan paired the SR20DET turbocharged engine with the chassis tuning that turned the Silvia into a drift icon.
Drifting has a history, and Keiichi Tsuchiya is most of it. He was sliding Silvias around Gunma's mountain passes years before the word "drift" got attached to the discipline, and his choice of chassis defined what came next. The S-chassis has weight balance close to 50:50, a turbocharged engine that takes more abuse than most contemporaries, and a multi-link rear end that rotates without trying to kill the driver. Three decades on, grassroots drift paddocks around the world remain stuffed with these cars.
Earlier generations turn up on Japanese auction floors from time to time. They're a niche choice, though. Buyers who really want a CSP311 or an S10 know who they are; everyone else can ignore them.
Nissan Silvia price guide
Silvia prices have moved a long way over the past five years. Some buyers are still mentally pricing these cars at 2018 numbers. That math no longer works.
Pricing on a clean unmodified S13 generally lands somewhere between $10,000 and $25,000. The bottom end of that range tends to be cars running the older CA18 or KA24 engines. SR20DET cars and the pop up headlight 180SX RPS13 hatchback command more, and the genuinely exceptional examples have pushed past $54,000 at auction.
S14 territory is roughly $18,000 to $35,000. The average clean example lands around $19,700. Kouki facelift cars from 1996 onwards command a premium over the earlier zenki cars. Auction highs have reached $58,500 for low mileage standouts.
S15 prices have left the rest of the lineup behind. A clean Spec-R runs $30,000 to $55,000, with the market average around $35,080. Low mileage Spec-Rs have hit $90,000 at recent auction. Naturally aspirated Spec-S models cost less, often $20,000 to $30,000, though supply on those is thin.
A genuinely cheap Nissan Silvia for sale today usually means an S13 with the CA18 or KA24 engine, or a heavily modified car priced below the market for a reason. Clean unmodified Silvias under $10,000 have mostly disappeared.
Nissan Silvia model overview
Nissan produced seven generations of the Silvia between 1965 and 2002. Three generations matter to most export buyers: S13 (1988 to 1994), S14 (1993 to 1998), and S15 (1999 to 2002). All three use Rear Wheel Drive. All three were available with the SR20DET turbocharged inline four-cylinder engine.
The CSP311 through S12 generations have small cult followings. Auction supply on these is limited, and prices swing widely depending on condition.
Nissan Silvia S13 (1988 to 1994)
Production of the fifth generation Silvia began in May 1988. The S13 won Car of the Year Japan that same year. Early cars used the 1.8 liter CA18DE and CA18DET engines carried over from the S12. Then in mid-1990 Nissan swapped these for the new 2.0 liter SR20DE and turbocharged SR20DET. The engine change reshaped what the car could do.
Factory SR20DET output: 205 horsepower at 6,000 rpm. The block is a closed-deck aluminum. The crank is forged. Tuners regularly hit 350 to 400 horsepower on factory internals with intercooler, bigger turbo, and ECU work. The bottom end takes punishment that destroys other engines.
Three body styles were sold in Japan. The notchback two-door coupe was the Silvia proper. Pop-up headlight fastback hatchbacks went out as the 180SX with chassis code RPS13, and Autech turned out roughly 600 convertibles in 1988 for a limited Japanese release.
Here's where buyers get confused: the 180SX continued rolling off the line until 1998, three full years after the S14 had launched. Same S13 chassis under both bodies, different names on the badge, different chassis codes on the paperwork. Japanese auction listings for a Nissan Silvia S13 for sale tend to lump the notchback and the 180SX together under one search filter. If someone is specifically chasing a Nissan Silvia RPS13 for sale, the chassis code on the auction sheet is what confirms it's actually the 180SX body.
Around 300,000 S13s rolled out across all markets in total. Europe took them as the 200SX. North America got the 240SX, with the larger naturally aspirated KA24DE engine instead of the SR20DET.
Nissan Silvia S14 (1993 to 1998)
The sixth-generation Silvia arrived in late 1993. Wider than the S13. Longer too. Heavier. The width pushed the car out of Japan's compact vehicle tax bracket, hurting domestic sales. That sales hit explains part of why S14 prices have stayed sensible compared to the S13 and S15. The S14 is the underdog generation, and the underdog is usually the value pick.
The updated SR20DET in the S14 runs a Garrett T28 turbocharger and Nissan's N-VCT variable valve timing. Factory output: around 220 horsepower.
S14 production splits into two phases. Cars built from 1993 to 1996 are Zenki, with the original front end and tail light design. Cars built from 1996 to 1998 are kouki, with sharper front styling, projector headlights, and tinted tail lights. Kouki cars command a price premium. Nissan Silvia S14 for sale listings should always specify the phase, because values differ.
S14 production for Japan ended in 1998. North America got the chassis as the 240SX from 1995 to 1998, again with the KA24DE engine.
Nissan Silvia S15 (1999 to 2002)
Production of the last Silvia ran from January 1999 to August 2002. The S15 brought the car back inside Japan's compact tax bracket after the wider S14 had pushed it out, and Nissan offered it in two main trims.
The Spec-R runs an updated SR20DET making 247 horsepower at 6,400 rpm, paired with a six speed Aisin manual gearbox, a helical limited slip differential, four piston front brake calipers borrowed from the Z32 Nissan 300ZX, and additional chassis bracing the earlier cars never had. The Spec-S used the naturally aspirated SR20DE making 163 horsepower with a five speed manual.
Production ended at around 70,000 total units across both trims, and that limited volume drives most of the prices commanded by Nissan Silvia S15 for sale listings. Clean low-mileage Spec-Rs are hitting $50,000 to $90,000 at auction in 2026, and the trend line still points up.
Engine, performance, and driving
Nissan produced the SR20DET from 1989 to 2002 and installed it in the S13, S14, and S15 Silvia. The block is a closed-deck aluminum. The crank is forged. The head is a 16 valve aluminum unit. Factory power climbed across the generations: 205 horsepower in the S13, around 220 in the S14, 247 in the S15 Spec-R. Tuned street cars routinely run 350 to 600 horsepower. Competition examples have gone much further.
All three modern Silvias use multi-link rear suspension. Weight distribution sits close to 50:50. Steering is hydraulic and direct. Power delivery on the turbo cars is linear, not the violent on-off character of a stock RX-7 FD, which makes the Silvia easier to learn at the limit.
What is the top speed of a Nissan Silvia?
Stock Japanese market Silvias are electronically limited to 180 km/h (112 mph). That's the gentleman's agreement speed limiter that Japanese manufacturers used in this era. Remove the limiter and a stock S15 Spec-R pulls to around 250 km/h (155 mph) before drag wins. S13 and S14 cars give up sooner, around 230 km/h (143 mph). Tuned cars go significantly higher. Those numbers depend on gearing and modifications more than the chassis itself.
Is the Nissan Silvia a good drift car?
The Silvia ranks among the most popular drift platforms for solid structural reasons rather than marketing. It has rear wheel drive with a factory limited slip differential on most turbo trims, near-50:50 weight balance, multi-link rear suspension, and an SR20DET that delivers power linearly rather than in violent on-off boost spikes. The hydraulic steering talks honestly, and a global aftermarket has been refining drift parts for this chassis since the early 1990s.
Tsuchiya developed modern drifting on the Silvia. Grassroots events from Irwindale to Goodwood are still full of S13s and S14s, and professional Formula Drift competitors continue running all three generations.
Predictable chassis, parts available everywhere, and an enormous owner community to draw from. For experienced drivers, the platform takes serious abuse without coming apart, which is most of why competition builds at the top of the pyramid still tends to start with an S-chassis underneath.
Ownership and import
The SR20DET is durable but not bulletproof. The OEM cylinder head gets restrictive at higher boost. Boost control solenoids fail with age. The cooling system needs inspection on any car with a track history. Compression test and leak down test are sensible on any Silvia at this age.
Import rules vary by destination market. Under the US 25-year rule, every S13 and most S14 cars are eligible right now. S15 examples phase in monthly starting from 2024 based on date of manufacture. The United Kingdom has no age limit, and JDM Nissan Silvias for sale register without right hand drive conversion. Australia, New Zealand, and most African and Caribbean markets process JDM Silvias under their own age and right-hand drive rules. Confirm current regulations with your local authority before committing to any car.
Why buy a Silvia from Japan?
Japanese-market Silvias usually come out of ownership in better shape than examples that stayed overseas. Two reasons. Shaken, the biennial Japanese vehicle inspection, forces owners to keep cars mechanically sorted or pay heavily every two years. Japanese modification culture tends to be visible (wheels, exhaust, body kits) rather than internal, so JDM cars are less likely to have been opened up and rebuilt by someone whose work nobody can verify decades on.
The auction grading system handles the rest. Grade 5 is exceptional. Grade 4 to 4.5 is clean. Grade 3.5 is rougher but accurately graded. R-grade means accident repair history, and those cars need closer inspection. The grading sheet forms part of the export documentation, so the buyer sees it directly before purchase.
Safety
The Silvia carries the safety equipment standard for a Japanese sports coupe of the 1990s. Dual front airbags came standard on S14 and S15 cars. Anti-lock braking systems came standard on most turbo trims. The chassis has a high-strength steel safety cell with side impact protection beams in the doors. The S15 Spec-R additionally got four-piston front brakes and a helical LSD, both of which help in everyday driving safety as well as performance.
No Silvia generation has Euro NCAP or IIHS crash ratings. The model predates standardized regional crash testing for this segment. Buyers should verify that airbags, seatbelt retractors, and ABS components are working on any car they consider, because these systems can degrade on cars that have sat unused for long stretches.
Buyer takeaways
The Silvia is one of the more accessible ways into Japanese rear wheel drive performance. Engines and chassis are durable. Parts stay available thanks to the global drift scene. Values across all three modern generations have either held or climbed, and the S15 keeps appreciating.
Where buyers get hurt is condition. The platform has been a drift and tuning favorite for three and a half decades. Finding genuinely honest, original examples takes patience. A pre-purchase inspection by someone familiar with the model is worth what it costs, and the Japanese auction grade sheet does most of the rest.
Browse the current Nissan Silvia inventory at SAT Japan for verified examples sourced direct from Japanese auctions, with full grade sheet documentation on every listing.
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