The most technologically advanced Corvette is the quickest American production car yet

Remember when Chevrolet unleashed the Corvette ZR1X? Well, it just achieved one heck of a record.

Driven by a singular mission to create the world’s best hypercar, the Corvette engineering team developed the ZR1X, pairing a twin-turbo LT7 V8 with an electrified front axle, adaptive front suspension, and advanced eAWD to produce a staggering 1,250 HP, surpassing the already formidable 1,078 HP C8 ZR1. It's the most technologically advanced Corvette ever, and it's also the quickest American production car.

Corvette ZR1X does the quarter-mile in 8.6 seconds image

To prove what it can truly do, testing was conducted in October 2025 at US 131 Motorsports Park, a drag strip favored by Corvette owners. On a prepped surface and running 93-octane pump gas, the all-wheel-drive hybrid, using standard Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tires, optional carbon-fiber wheels, a default aero setup, and a fully street-legal 50-state production engine calibration, blasted through the quarter mile in 8.675 seconds at 255 km/h (159 mph). During the same run, it launched from 0–97 km/h (0–60 mph) in just 1.68 seconds, generating a staggering 1.75 g of peak acceleration.

Corvette ZR1X does the quarter-mile in 8.6 seconds image

Technology meets horsepower as Corvette development engineer and test driver Stefan Frick relied on the Corvette’s standard Custom Launch Control system. By precisely managing tire spin, transmission clutch application, and multiple vehicle parameters, the system allowed optimal acceleration through adjustable launch RPM and wheel-slip targets displayed on the auxiliary driver screen.

“We were all motivated by the mission to break into the eights. This is a powerful example of the level of performance we engineered into this car,” said Frick.

Corvette ZR1X does the quarter-mile in 8.6 seconds image

The 2026 Corvette ZR1X began production in December 2025, and is proudly built in America at General Motors’ Bowling Green Assembly Plant in Kentucky from U.S. and globally sourced part