Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. Legacy Archives

Koenigsegg’s U.S.-bound 1,140-hp Agera R targets Bugatti Veyron … and jet fighters

Add as a preferred source on Google

Currently, the only Swedish cars available new in the United States wear a Volvo emblem on the radiator grille. A second Swedish automaker is about to join the party, and it’s not the moribund one that is known for building Griffin-badged cars in Trollhättan.

Swedish supercar manufacturer Koenigsegg has announced plans to return to the U.S. after a brief hiatus with two fully street-legal models. The first will be the Agera, a low-slung V8-powered supercar available in S tune with 1,040 horsepower or in R tune with a mighty 1,140 horsepower. The Agera R (pictured) can reach 62 mph from a stop in 2.8 seconds – nearly on par with a Bugatti Veyron – before going on to a top speed of about 273 mph.

Recommended Videos

The second member of the Koenigsegg lineup will be an all-new model that will likely be introduced at next March’s Geneva Motor Show. It should be noted that a single example of the outlandish, 1,341-horsepower One:1 will be offered for sale in the United States but it’s not street legal so it will be imported under the “show and display” law.

The first Koenigsegg dealer in the United States will be Manhattan Motorcars in New York City. Manhattan Motorcars was a natural choice for the company because it has a long history of selling and servicing high-end cars built by companies like Lamborghini, Bugatti, Rolls-Royce and even Spyker. Three more dealers will be opened in undisclosed locations across North America over the course of 2015.

Power, luxury and exclusivity come at a hefty price: Car & Driver reports that the Agera will cost $1,650,000 before options are factored in,  a figure that makes it roughly four times as expensive as a Lamborghini Aventador. In spite of its cars’ astronomical price tag, Koenigsegg is confident that setting up shop in the United States will allow it to boost production to about 23 hand-built units a year.

Ronan Glon
Ronan Glon is an American automotive and tech journalist based in southern France. As a long-time contributor to Digital…
BYD’s Great Tang eSUV offers 10-minute charging and a 590-mile range starting at $40,000
Spectacular specs, record preorders, and not a single one headed to America.
Car, Transportation, Vehicle

BYD just launched the Great Tang, a full-size electric SUV that offers the range of a regular gasoline-powered car and takes only slightly longer to refuel (read: recharge). 

The company's flagship eSUV starts at around $35,500 and gives most American electric SUVs a serious run for their money.

Read more
BMW is taking orders for the i3 way ahead of schedule, and it’s got a happy problem to blame
Too much demand, too good a car to make people wait until fall.
Bumper, Transportation, Vehicle

BMW planned to open order books for the new i3 sedan this fall, but now, the automaker is opening them this week instead. The reason is the kind of happy problem every automaker wishes they had.

As it turns out, too many people want to buy the car, and the automaker decided it would be rude to make them wait.

Read more
Porsche’s 2027 Taycan gets virtual E-Shift gears hooked to real paddle shifters
Porsche’s is trying to solve one of the most prominent EV hardware problems with software.
Car, Coupe, Sports Car

While electric performance cars have gotten quite fast, especially when it comes to driving in a straight line, they still struggle to replicate the engaging feel of a regular sports car. Missing are the gear changes, the rev build, and the physical feedback that make a sports car feel alive.

Porsche thinks it can fix this with software, and the 2027 Taycan update is its most serious attempt yet. The car comes with something called E-Shift, a system that adds eight virtual gears operated using the paddle shifters behind the steering wheel.

Read more