Next Level Performance
June 29, 2026 • 10 min read
The best suspension upgrades for the 2011-2014 Subaru WRX and STI start with the parts that fix the chassis from the ground up — control arms, bushings, coilovers, and sway bar endlinks. The GR/GV-generation WRX (265 hp EJ255) and STI (305 hp EJ257) left the factory with capable bones, but soft rubber bushings, a non-adjustable rear camber setup, and one-size-fits-all damping hold the platform back the moment you push it on a back road or track. This buyer's guide compares five proven upgrades we stock and install at our Tampa, FL shop, ranging from a $111 endlink set to a $2,900 Ohlins coilover system, so you can build a sharper, more planted WRX or STI in the right order.
Our Verdict
The Whiteline KTA291 Front Lower Control Arm is the best-value suspension upgrade for the 2011-2014 WRX/STI — it adds +0.5° of negative camber, lightweight alloy construction, and a sealed-bearing bushing for $418.18.
If your budget allows a full transformation, the Ohlins Road & Track DFV coilover system ($2,900) is our premium pick for the most adjustable, track-capable ride. For the biggest handling gain per dollar, start with the Whiteline arms and a set of Kartboy endlinks.
Shop Our Top Pick →Why the 2011-2014 WRX and STI Need a Suspension Upgrade
The 2011-2014 Subaru WRX and STI belong to the GR/GV chassis generation — the STI sedan is chassis code GVB, the hatch is GRB, and the 2011 WRX sedan adopted the wider-track, STI-derived body. All of them use a MacPherson-strut front suspension and a double-wishbone rear. It is a fundamentally good layout, but Subaru built these cars for showroom comfort, not maximum grip.
Two factory compromises limit the platform. First, the soft rubber control-arm and subframe bushings deflect under load, allowing unwanted toe and camber change exactly when you want the tires planted. Second, OEM Subaru suspension offers no adjustable rear camber and very limited rear toe adjustment, so once you lower the car or add power, you cannot dial in a proper alignment with the stock hardware. Stiffer, geometry-correct components solve both problems and unlock the chassis the factory hinted at.
The upgrades below attack those weak points directly: lightweight alloy control arms that add static camber and kill bushing deflection, offset inner bushings that create alignment adjustment where the factory left none, adjustable coilovers that replace the soft monotube struts and fixed ride height, and rigid sway bar endlinks that let the bars actually do their job. At our Tampa shop, this is the order in which we recommend most WRX and STI owners spend their money.
Whiteline's alloy front lower control arm builds +0.5° of camber and anti-lift caster geometry into the 2011-2014 WRX/STI front end.
How We Chose These Suspension Upgrades
Every product in this guide is in stock at NLP Performance and is verified to fit the 2011-2014 WRX and STI by part-number fitment data, not guesswork. We prioritized parts that solve a specific chassis weakness, come from brands with a real motorsport track record (Whiteline, Ohlins, HKS, COBB, Kartboy), and represent distinct price tiers so you can match the upgrade to your budget and goals. We did not include lowering springs or sway bars that are only confirmed for the earlier 2002-2007 or later 2015+ chassis — fitment accuracy matters more than padding the list.
The 5 Best Suspension Upgrades for the 2011-2014 WRX/STI
Here are our top picks, organized from the highest-value handling upgrade to the premium full-coilover route. Prices are current at NLP Performance and every part links to its product page with verified fitment for the 2011-2014 WRX and STI.
1. Whiteline Front Lower Control Arm (KTA291) — Best Value
The Whiteline KTA291 is the single most cost-effective handling mod for this chassis, which is exactly why it tops our list. The arms are CNC-machined from high-quality alloy, saving meaningful unsprung weight over the heavier stamped-steel OE arms — the same kind of benefit you get from a lighter wheel. Whiteline engineers +0.5° of additional negative camber directly into the geometry, so you get a sharper, flatter front end without bolt-on camber plates.
Just as important is the anti-lift caster geometry. The arms optimize caster to maximize the tire contact patch as the body rolls, improving turn-in response and high-speed directional stability. The rear-mounted bushing pairs a synthetic-elastomer formulation with a sealed bearing assembly so the arm moves freely with suspension travel, while an oversized heavy-duty crush tube in the front bushing dramatically reduces toe-change during hard cornering. The result is a front end that tracks straight, turns in crisply, and stops wandering over mid-corner bumps.
Key Specifications — Whiteline KTA291
What We Like
- + Alloy arms cut unsprung weight versus heavier OE steel
- + Built-in +0.5° camber sharpens turn-in with no extra camber bolts
- + Sealed-bearing rear bushing eliminates toe-change deflection
Things to Consider
- – Addresses front geometry only — add rear arms for full alignment control
- – Firmer bushings pass slightly more road feel than worn OE rubber
2. Ohlins Road & Track DFV Coilover System — Best Premium Upgrade
When you want the complete package — adjustable ride height, motorsport-grade damping, and a ride that is genuinely livable on the street — the Ohlins Road & Track system is the benchmark. Each strut is an inverted monotube with a floating internal piston, a construction that is more rigid and far less susceptible to lateral loads than a conventional monotube. The bodies are anodized aluminum, so the kit is lighter than the factory struts and corrosion-resistant for Florida summers and salty winter roads alike.
The headline feature is Ohlins' DFV (Dual Flow Valve) technology. DFV gives the damper a consistent flow path on both compression and rebound, so a single golden knob with 20-plus clicks lets you swing from a compliant street setting to a firm track setup without the harsh, crashy compromise cheaper coilovers force. Add the full ride-height and corner-balance adjustability and you have a system that can be daily-driven Monday and run a track day Saturday.
What We Like
- + DFV valving stays composed on both smooth track and broken street
- + Inverted monotube resists lateral-load flex for sharper response
- + 20+ click single-knob damping plus full ride-height adjustment
Things to Consider
- – Premium price — the most expensive option in this guide at $2,900
- – Requires a corner-balance and alignment to realize full potential
The Ohlins golden adjuster offers 20+ clicks of single-knob damping control.
3. HKS HIPERMAX S Full Coilover Kit — Best Coilover Value
If the Ohlins kit sits just outside your budget, the HKS HIPERMAX S delivers a genuine performance coilover for $2,080. HKS built its reputation on Japanese tuning and motorsport, and the HIPERMAX S uses a monotube damper with adjustable damping and ride height tuned for a firm-but-controlled street feel. It is the sweet spot for a 2011-2014 WRX or STI owner who wants a noticeable drop, flatter cornering, and the ability to fine-tune the ride without spending nearly $3,000. It pairs especially well with the Whiteline control arms, which restore proper geometry once you lower the car.
4. COBB Front Control Arm Inner Bushing Kit (Offset Alignment) — Best Alignment Fix
Because the factory front end gives you almost no camber adjustment, the COBB offset inner bushing kit is the smart, affordable way to create it. The offset bushings press into the front control arm's inner mounts and let an alignment tech add negative camber and adjust caster to your spec — perfect for an STI owner running wider tires or a lowered car that needs more aggressive front alignment. At $254.88 it is a fraction of the cost of adjustable arms or camber plates, and it stacks cleanly with the Whiteline arms for owners chasing track alignment numbers.
5. Kartboy Adjustable Sway Bar Endlinks — Best Budget Handling Mod
Endlinks are the cheapest handling upgrade that actually changes how the car feels. The factory rubber-bushed links flex and bind, so the sway bar never delivers its full anti-roll force. Kartboy's heavy-duty links replace that slop with stiff, bind-free hardware so the bar reacts instantly to body roll. The rear endlink kit ($119.77) fits 2008-2021 WRX/STI, and the solid front endlinks ($111.51) are confirmed for the 2002-2014 WRX/STI sedan. For under $250 you get sharper transitions and a more connected steering feel — the ideal first mod or the finishing touch on a coilover build.
2011-2014 WRX/STI Suspension Upgrade Comparison
Here is how the five upgrades stack up by type, ideal use, and price. Each product links directly to its page with verified 2011-2014 WRX/STI fitment.
| Kit | Type | Best For | Highlight | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Whiteline Front Lower Control ArmTop Pick | Control arm (pair) | Sharper turn-in & value | +0.5° camber, alloy | $418.18 |
| Ohlins Road & Track Coilovers | Coilovers | Track + daily driving | DFV, 20+ clicks | $2,900.00 |
| HKS HIPERMAX S Full Kit | Coilovers | Spirited street value | Monotube, adjustable | $2,080.00 |
| COBB Inner Bushing Kit (Offset) | Offset bushings | Camber/caster alignment | Adds front adjustment | $254.88 |
| Kartboy Sway Bar Endlinks | Endlinks | Budget responsiveness | Bind-free, adjustable | $119.77 |
Coilovers, Control Arms, or Bushings: What Should You Upgrade First?
Start with the upgrade that matches your biggest complaint. If the car feels vague and rolls too much but the ride height is fine, begin with the Whiteline control arms and Kartboy endlinks — roughly $530 total for a transformed front end and quicker sway bar response. If you want a lower stance and adjustable damping, the coilovers are the foundation, and you should add the control arms afterward to correct the geometry that lowering disrupts.
For a track-focused 2011-2014 STI, the ideal stack is coilovers for ride height and damping, Whiteline arms for static camber and rigidity, and the COBB offset bushings to fine-tune the alignment to your tire and corner-weight targets. Daily drivers who just want a sharper, more confident street car get most of the benefit from the control arms and endlinks alone. Whatever you choose, budget for a professional alignment afterward — it is the step that turns new hardware into a measurable handling gain.
A full coilover system replaces the soft factory struts and fixed ride height for total adjustability.
Installation and Alignment Notes
The Whiteline control arms are a roughly two-hour DIY job with hand tools and a press is not required — the bushings come installed. Coilovers take a half-day for most home mechanics and require spring-compressor-free assembly since they ship as complete struts. Sway bar endlinks are the easiest upgrade on this list, typically 20-30 minutes per axle.
One rule applies to every part here: get a four-wheel alignment afterward. Any time you change a control arm, ride height, or bushing offset, your camber, caster, and toe move. A proper alignment protects your tires from premature wear and is what actually delivers the sharper steering and stability these parts promise. At NLP Performance we recommend aligning to a mild street spec for daily cars and a more aggressive negative-camber spec for track use.
Whiteline's sealed-bearing rear bushing reduces toe-change during hard cornering.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best suspension upgrades for the 2011-2014 Subaru WRX and STI?
The best suspension upgrades for the 2011-2014 Subaru WRX and STI are the Whiteline KTA291 front lower control arms ($418.18) for geometry and value, Ohlins Road & Track coilovers ($2,900) for a full track-and-street setup, the COBB offset inner bushing kit ($254.88) for alignment adjustment, and Kartboy sway bar endlinks (from $111.51) for budget responsiveness. Most owners get the biggest gain per dollar by starting with the control arms and endlinks.
Does the 2011-2014 WRX/STI need adjustable control arms after lowering?
Yes. The factory 2011-2014 WRX/STI suspension has no adjustable rear camber and very limited rear toe adjustment, so lowering the car pushes the alignment out of spec with no stock way to correct it. Adjustable arms or offset bushings (like the COBB kit) restore the ability to dial in camber and toe, which prevents uneven tire wear and twitchy handling after a drop.
How much does it cost to upgrade the suspension on a 2011-2014 WRX/STI?
A suspension upgrade for the 2011-2014 WRX/STI ranges from about $111 for a set of sway bar endlinks to $2,900 for a complete Ohlins coilover system. A high-value handling package of Whiteline front control arms plus Kartboy endlinks runs roughly $530 before alignment. Budget an additional $100-$150 for a professional four-wheel alignment.
Will the Whiteline KTA291 control arm fit both the WRX and the STI?
Yes. The Whiteline KTA291 front lower control arm fits the 2011-2014 Subaru Impreza WRX, WRX Limited, WRX Premium, and WRX STI, including STI Limited. It is sold as a pair and adds +0.5° of negative camber along with anti-lift caster geometry across all of those trims.
Do I need an alignment after installing control arms or coilovers?
Yes, always get a four-wheel alignment after installing control arms, coilovers, or offset bushings. Each of these changes your camber, caster, or toe, and driving on an incorrect alignment causes rapid tire wear and unpredictable handling. The alignment is also what converts the new hardware into the sharper, more stable feel it is designed to deliver.
Are Ohlins Road & Track coilovers good for daily driving?
Yes. The Ohlins Road & Track system is one of the most street-friendly performance coilovers available for the WRX/STI thanks to DFV (Dual Flow Valve) damping, which stays compliant over rough pavement while still firming up for the track. With 20-plus clicks of single-knob adjustment, you can set a comfortable daily ride and stiffen it for a track day in seconds.
Ready to Transform Your WRX or STI?
Shop control arms, coilovers, bushings, and endlinks for the 2011-2014 WRX/STI and thousands more performance parts at NLP Performance.
Shop the Suspension CollectionFree shipping on select brands • Located in Tampa, FL