The Cobra Name Is Back On A Coupe — And It Looks Like It Belongs On A 1960s Le Mans Grid

May 30, 2026

AC Cars has just revealed the Cobra GT Coupe — a closed-roof, supercharged supercar wearing one of motorsport’s most storied nameplates — and it arrives at a moment worth marking: this is the first production Cobra coupe in the nameplate’s entire history. The original 1960s Cobras were open roadsters and purpose-built competition machines; no factory-production sports coupe ever reached a customer’s driveway. That changes now, and the timing is deliberate. AC is celebrating its 125th anniversary, and the GT Coupe is the company’s statement that the Cobra name still has somewhere to go.

720 Horsepower, Carbon Fiber, and a Ford V8 Under the Skin

ac-cobra-gt-coupe
image of newly lucherd AC Cobra GT Coupe
AC Cars

The Cobra GT Coupe is built around a supercharged Ford V8 producing 720 horsepower — a number that puts it squarely in the company of modern British and European supercars rather than the tribute-car tier. The body is carbon fiber construction throughout, keeping weight in check and reinforcing that AC is positioning this as a genuine performance machine, not a show piece with a famous name on the nose.

Pricing sits at approximately $535,000, which means the GT Coupe costs more than two Porsche 911 GT3s and lands in a bracket where buyers are cross-shopping Aston Martin and McLaren. That’s a significant ask, but it also signals what AC is attempting: a return to the upper end of the supercar market, where the Cobra name once competed on equal terms with Ferrari and the best Europe had to offer. Production numbers haven’t been confirmed at this stage, but given the price point and AC’s scale, a strictly limited run is the safe assumption.

The A98 Connection — Why the Le Mans Racer Matters Here

ac-cobra-gt-coupe-launch
image of newly lucherd AC Cobra GT Coupe
AC Cars

The AC A98 is the design reference that makes the GT Coupe’s styling claims credible. AC built the A98 fastback specifically for endurance racing in the early 1960s, giving the Cobra competition program a closed-roof option that the roadster couldn’t provide at sustained high speed. It never became a production model — the roadster dominated the lineup and the competition coupe remained a racing-only exercise — which is precisely why the GT Coupe carries real historical weight by finally bringing that body style to paying customers.

The visual callback is intentional and specific: the roofline, the fastback greenhouse, and the overall proportion echo what the A98 looked like on the Mulsanne Straight. For Cobra collectors who have followed the full lineage — from the AC Ace through the 289, the 427, and the Daytona Coupe-era competition machines — the GT Coupe reads as a coherent next chapter rather than a stretch. It’s the body style the original program gestured toward but never completed.


The headlight of a bright red 1960s sports car


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A Nameplate Resurrection, Not a Continuation — and That Distinction Matters

AC Cobra GT Coupe veiled
AC Cobra GT Coupe veiled
Via: AC Cars

AC Cars holds the Cobra name, and the GT Coupe is a legitimate AC product — Britain’s oldest-surviving car manufacturer building a car under its own roof. That’s worth stating clearly, because the Cobra name has appeared on various continuation and tribute projects over the decades, and the provenance question is always the first one serious collectors ask.

This is not a factory continuation, and it isn’t a licensed replica. Carroll Shelby’s involvement with AC ended decades ago, and the GT Coupe doesn’t carry Shelby branding. What it does carry is AC’s unbroken corporate lineage back to the original Ace that Shelby first spotted in the 1950s. For enthusiasts who care about that distinction — and most Cobra people do — the GT Coupe sits on the right side of the authenticity line. Whether 720 horsepower and a $535,000 price tag honor what Carroll Shelby would have wanted is a more interesting argument, and one that’s already started.

The Cobra GT Coupe won’t be for everyone, and at that price it was never going to be. But as a statement of intent from AC at 125 years old, it’s hard to argue with the ambition. Gearheads who’ve spent years watching the Cobra name get stretched across kit cars and tribute builds finally have a factory coupe to point to — one that traces its design directly to Le Mans and backs it up with the horsepower to make the comparison stick. Here’s hoping AC builds enough of them that one eventually shows up at a Concours without ropes around it.

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