Mazda has pulled the covers off its all-new Vision-X Coupe at the Japan Mobility Show in Tokyo, revealing a futuristic four-door coupe designed for 2035. Despite being decades ahead in ambition, the concept stays rooted in Mazda’s core design philosophy, elegant simplicity fused with emotional appeal.
A Refined Evolution of Kodo Design
The Vision-X Coupe pushes Mazda’s Kodo design language into new territory, more sculptural, more disciplined, yet unmistakably Mazda. Gone is the clutter of sharp creases and fake vents. In its place stands a sleek body with clean surfacing and flowing contours that catch the light just right.
At the front, a fully enclosed grille commands attention, punctuated by fang-like details that taper into slender headlights and a wide lower intake. From the side, the car’s streamlined silhouette is free of door handles or mirrors, replaced by digital alternatives. A rakish windscreen and sloping roofline blend into a compact rear deck, creating a poised, almost athletic stance.
Despite its fluid proportions, the Vision-X Coupe is no small sports car. It measures 5,050 mm in length, 1,995 mm in width, and 1,480 mm in height, riding on a 3,080 mm wheelbase. That makes it not just longer than the Mazda6, but also larger than the Mercedes CLS a segment benchmark it clearly aims to surpass.
Minimalist Cabin, Rich in Character
Inside, Mazda breaks away from the screen-heavy sterility dominating today’s interiors. The Vision-X Coupe’s cabin is purposefully minimalist yet deeply tactile, echoing the craftsmanship the brand is known for.
The driver faces a triple-display digital instrument cluster styled like retro gauges, paired with a small digital panel on the steering wheel. The overall layout feels driver-focused and cinematic rather than clinical.
An infotainment screen and a dedicated passenger display are neatly integrated into the dashboard, while a wide center console and a baseball-stitched shifter nod to classic Mazda sports cars. The rear features two individual seats, enveloped in two-tone leather upholstery and warm, textured trims. It’s a space that feels crafted, not computed.
Rotary Revival: Turbo Meets Electric
At its core, the Vision-X Coupe brings back a legend: the rotary engine. But this time, it’s reborn as part of a plug-in hybrid setup, combining a turbocharged rotary unit, an electric motor, and a high-capacity battery.
Together, they deliver a potent 503 horsepower and an electric-only range of 99 miles (160 km). Total range stretches to around 497 miles (800 km), numbers that place it comfortably among tomorrow’s grand tourers.
A Car That Cleans the Air
Mazda has gone beyond performance and efficiency. The Vision-X Coupe is designed to clean the air as it drives, using a blend of carbon-neutral fuel made from microalgae and Mazda’s own CO₂ capture technology.
As CEO Masahiro Moro explained, microalgae absorb CO₂ during growth and produce oils that can be refined into fuel. What’s left behind becomes a nutrient-rich byproduct that can feed agriculture. Meanwhile, Mazda’s exhaust system can trap carbon emissions and recycle them into materials or fertilizers.
A Glimpse of Mazda’s Future
With the Vision-X Coupe, Mazda signals more than a concept, it’s a manifesto for the brand’s next era. Emotionally resonant design, mechanical innovation, and environmental consciousness converge in a single silhouette.
If this is the direction Mazda is steering toward 2035, the future looks fast, thoughtful, and unmistakably human.




