Next Level Performance
July 11, 2026 • 11 min read
The first-generation Toyota 86, Scion FR-S, and Subaru BRZ are three badges on one of the best-handling affordable sports cars ever built — and the best Toyota 86 and Subaru BRZ performance upgrades are the ones that address its one honest weakness: the 200-horsepower FA20 boxer wants more grunt. In our Tampa, FL shop we build these ZN6/ZC6 twins constantly, and the parts that deliver the biggest real-world difference fall into four buckets: forced induction, breathing, suspension, and drivetrain. Below are the six upgrades we reach for most, from a $412 intake to a $4,950 HKS turbo kit.
Our Verdict
The HKS GTIII-RS Turbo Pro Kit is the biggest single power upgrade for the FA20 86/BRZ — but the smartest builds start with breathing, sound, and suspension.
For the first-gen Toyota 86, Scion FR-S, and Subaru BRZ, we recommend building in stages: a cold-air intake and cat-back exhaust to wake up the boxer, KW coilovers and adjustable sway bars to sharpen an already brilliant chassis, then the HKS turbo kit — with a supporting clutch and tune — when you want a real horsepower jump. All six picks below are in stock and fitment-verified at our Tampa, FL shop.
Shop Our Top Pick →Why the Toyota 86 and Subaru BRZ Are So Easy to Modify
The Toyota 86 (sold as the Scion FR-S from 2013–2016 and the Toyota 86 from 2017–2020) and the Subaru BRZ are the same car underneath: the shared ZN6/ZC6 chassis and the naturally aspirated 2.0L FA20 flat-four boxer. From the factory, that FA20 makes 200 horsepower at 7,000 rpm and 151 lb-ft of torque, rising to 205 hp and 156 lb-ft on 2017-and-newer six-speed manual cars. Curb weight sits around 2,760–2,800 lb, and the boxer's low mounting point gives the car a genuinely low center of gravity and a roughly 53/47 front-to-rear weight balance.
That chassis is the reason enthusiasts love the platform — and the reason the mod path is so clear. The suspension geometry, steering, and balance are already sorted, so upgrades pay off immediately. The only real complaint is the well-documented mid-range "torque dip" around 4,000 rpm and a peak output that trails the competition. Every part in this roundup exists to fix one of those two things: add power, or make the chassis even sharper. Because the FR-S, 86, and BRZ share the same engine and body, the aftermarket for all three is enormous and interchangeable, which keeps prices competitive and fitment simple.
Forced induction is the single biggest power move for the FA20 86/BRZ.
How We Picked the Best 86 / BRZ Upgrades
We chose these six upgrades using three filters: measurable benefit, proven brand support, and confirmed fitment for the first-gen car. Every product here is in stock at NLP Performance in Tampa, FL, and every fitment was checked against the ZN6/ZC6 chassis and FA20 engine before it made the list. We deliberately spread the picks across the four categories that matter on this platform — forced induction, exhaust, intake, suspension, and drivetrain — so the list works whether you want maximum horsepower or a razor-sharp autocross car. We did not include cosmetic-only parts; each pick changes how the car drives, sounds, or performs.
The Best Performance Upgrades for the Toyota 86 & Subaru BRZ
Biggest Power Gain: HKS 86/BRZ GTIII-RS Turbo Pro Kit
The HKS GTIII-RS Turbo Pro Kit is the most complete bolt-on turbo system we stock for the FA20, and it is the fastest way to transform the 200-horsepower boxer into a genuine sports-car engine. It is a full "Pro Kit," meaning it bundles the HKS GTIII-RS ball-bearing turbocharger, exhaust manifold, downpipe, intercooler, charge piping, and supporting fuel hardware into one part number (HKS hks11001-KT001). HKS positions this kit to push the FA20 into the roughly 300-plus horsepower range on a proper tune — about a 50% increase over stock — and it eliminates the factory torque dip by filling the mid-range with boost.
Key Specifications
What We Like
- + Roughly 50% more power — the FA20's single biggest upgrade
- + Complete kit: turbo, manifold, intercooler and piping in one box
- + Kills the factory 4,000-rpm torque dip with boost
Things to Consider
- – Requires a supporting tune, and an upgraded clutch is strongly advised
- – Non-CARB; not legal for sale or use in California
Best Handling Foundation: KW Variant 3 Coilovers
The KW Variant 3 coilover kit is the suspension upgrade we recommend most for a street-and-track 86/BRZ, because it adds independently adjustable rebound and compression damping on top of ride-height adjustment. Made in Germany with stainless-steel "inox-line" strut bodies, the V3 lets you dial in a lower, flatter stance and firmer body control without wrecking daily-driver comfort. For a chassis this good, quality dampers are what unlock the last 20% of the car's potential. Pair it with our coilover collection if you want to compare KW's other Variant lines.
Best Exhaust Note: Borla S-Type Cat-Back
The Borla S-Type cat-back is the upgrade that finally gives the flat-four the voice it deserves. Built entirely from 304 stainless steel and backed by Borla's million-mile warranty, this cat-back trades the muted factory drone for the aggressive, motorsport-flavored note Borla is known for, while adding a few peak horsepower by reducing back-pressure. On the FA20 the honest story is sound first, power second — but that soundtrack is a big part of why owners keep these cars. Note this specific part fits 2013–2015 FR-S and 2013 BRZ six-speed manual models.
304 stainless construction and polished tips on the Borla S-Type cat-back.
Best Bolt-On Value: Injen Evolution Cold Air Intake
At $412.72, the Injen Evolution intake is the highest value-per-dollar upgrade on this list. It uses a roto-molded, dyno-tuned intake tube and a dry filter to feed the FA20 more air while keeping an OE-quality fit, and it is one of the first mods we install on almost every build. It sharpens throttle response and adds intake growl under load, and it stacks cleanly with the cat-back and a tune. Like the turbo kit, this Injen intake is marked non-CARB and cannot ship to California.
Best Clutch for Boost: Exedy Stage 2 Cerametallic
If you add the HKS turbo kit, the Exedy Stage 2 Cerametallic clutch is the drivetrain insurance you need. The factory clutch is only rated for roughly stock torque, and it will slip once boost arrives. Exedy's cerametallic friction material handles far more abuse than a stock-type organic disc without slipping or fading, and the sprung-center design keeps engagement manageable on the street. At $459.83 it is cheap protection for a four-figure turbo investment.
Sharpen the Chassis: Hotchkis Adjustable Sway Bars
For the fastest handling gain per dollar, the Hotchkis adjustable sport sway bars are hard to beat. The set pairs a 25.4mm two-way adjustable front bar with a 19mm four-way adjustable blade-style rear bar, both powder-coated for durability. Adjustable end-link mounting lets you tune understeer and oversteer balance at the track without touching alignment, which makes an already sharp car feel telepathic. Browse the full suspension collection to match them with the KW coilovers above.
Two-way front and four-way rear adjustment let you tune chassis balance at the track.
Comparison Table: 86 / BRZ Upgrades at a Glance
| Kit | Category | Standout Spec | Best For | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HKS GTIII-RS Turbo Pro KitTop Pick | Forced Induction | ~300+ hp target | Maximum power | $4,950.00 |
| KW Variant 3 Coilovers | Coilovers | Dual-adjustable damping | Handling + stance | $3,214.00 |
| Borla S-Type Cat-Back | Exhaust | 304 stainless steel | Sound | $1,289.99 |
| Hotchkis Sway Bars | Sway Bars | 25.4mm F / 19mm R | Reduce body roll | $787.78 |
| Exedy Stage 2 Clutch | Clutch | Cerametallic disc | Holding boost | $459.83 |
| Injen Evolution Intake | Cold Air Intake | Roto-molded tube | Bolt-on value | $412.72 |
How to Build Your 86 / BRZ: A Sensible Mod Order
The smartest way to build a first-gen 86, FR-S, or BRZ is in stages, spending money where the platform responds best. Start with breathing and sound: the Injen Evolution intake ($412.72) and the Borla cat-back ($1,289.99), backed by an ECU tune, wake up the FA20 and make the naturally aspirated experience far more engaging for well under $2,000. Next, invest in the chassis while it is still stock power — KW Variant 3 coilovers ($3,214.00) and the Hotchkis sway bars ($787.78) turn a great-handling car into a track weapon and cost nothing in reliability.
Save forced induction for last, once the supporting parts are in place. When you fit the HKS GTIII-RS Turbo Pro Kit ($4,950.00), plan to install the Exedy Stage 2 clutch ($459.83) at the same time and budget for a proper tune to manage the roughly 300-plus horsepower safely. Built in that order, every dollar improves the car you already own instead of waiting on the next part. Not sure where to start? Our Tampa, FL team fits these combinations regularly and can help you spec a stage that matches your budget and goals — start with the turbocharger collection if maximum power is the priority.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much horsepower does the Toyota 86 / Subaru BRZ make stock?
The first-generation Toyota 86, Scion FR-S, and Subaru BRZ make 200 horsepower and 151 lb-ft of torque from their naturally aspirated 2.0L FA20 boxer engine. On 2017-and-newer six-speed manual cars, output rises slightly to 205 hp and 156 lb-ft. The chassis and balance are excellent, which is why owners focus their upgrade budget on adding power and sharpening handling.
What is the best performance mod for a Toyota 86 or Subaru BRZ?
The single biggest power upgrade for the FA20 86/BRZ is forced induction. The HKS GTIII-RS Turbo Pro Kit ($4,950) is the most complete bolt-on turbo system we stock and targets roughly 300-plus crank horsepower on a proper tune — about a 50% increase over stock. For a smaller budget, an intake, cat-back exhaust, and tune deliver the best value, and coilovers plus sway bars extract the most from the chassis.
Do you need a tune for a turbo kit on the 86 / BRZ?
Yes. Any forced-induction setup on the FA20, including the HKS GTIII-RS kit, requires an ECU tune to manage boost, fueling, and ignition timing safely. Running a turbo without a supporting tune risks lean conditions and engine damage. Plan to have the car tuned by a shop experienced with the platform as part of the install.
Do 86, FR-S, and BRZ parts interchange?
Yes, in the vast majority of cases. The Toyota 86, Scion FR-S, and Subaru BRZ share the same ZN6/ZC6 chassis and FA20 engine, so most first-generation performance parts fit all three interchangeably. Always confirm model year and transmission, since a few parts — like some cat-back exhausts — are listed for specific year and six-speed-manual applications.
Do I need a new clutch when I add a turbo to my BRZ or 86?
Yes, in most cases. The factory clutch is only rated for roughly stock torque and will slip once boost arrives. We recommend the Exedy Stage 2 Cerametallic clutch ($459.83), whose cerametallic friction material handles the higher torque of a turbocharged FA20 without slipping or fading. Installing it alongside the turbo kit avoids a second labor charge.
Are these Toyota 86 / BRZ parts legal in California?
Some are not. The HKS GTIII-RS turbo kit and the Injen Evolution intake are marked non-CARB and cannot be shipped to or used on registered vehicles in California. Bolt-ons like the KW coilovers, Hotchkis sway bars, and Exedy clutch carry no emissions restriction. Always verify CARB status for your state before purchasing forced-induction and intake parts.
Ready to Build Your 86 or BRZ?
Shop the HKS turbo kit and thousands more performance parts for the FA20 platform at NLP Performance.
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