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Acura Integra Type S Review

Acura Integra Type S Review

The race-engineered 2024 Acura Integra Type S is a variant of the Honda Civic Type S, but there are notable separators, including body styles and horsepower

An Apex Blue Acura Integra Type S with an ocean mural in the background

The Acura Integra had a complete redesign for 2022, and the Integra Type S was added for 2023. There are no changes for the 2024 Type S. (Photos by Mark Maynard or as credited)

Table of Contents

The Integra Legacy
Type S Pricing
Type S vs. Type R
Powertrain
Ride and Handling
Safety Features
Why Buy the 2024 Acura Integra Type S?
Specifications

BY MARK MAYNARD

While tooling about in the 2024 Acura Integra Type S, I successfully debunked the dad adage that a manual-transmission car will get better fuel economy than one with an automatic. The best I could muster in the test car was a combined 21.4 mpg — and that was hard-earned with mostly careful acceleration. EPA fuel economy estimates are 21 mpg city, 28 highway, and 24 mpg combined. (While testing the Honda Civic Type R stablemate, I reached a highway mileage reading of 26.8 mpg.)

I’m not typically reserved while testing a hot compact with a slick six-speed, but during my test week, premium fuel was $6 a gallon, and it doesn’t take long to burn through the 12.4-gallon tank. The highest octane available is recommended for max performance from the turbocharged 320-horsepower 2.0-liter four-cylinder engine.

Of course, I would not cheap out on the fuel grade for the Integra Type S. It deserves the best. And it is just too enjoyable to grab it by the scruff of the neck and shake it out.

This five-door, four-seat wily rascal has two levels of performance. The first is of the type that even a mother, or the dedicated hang-wringer in the relationship, would give the nod of approval. The sport bucket seats have an ominous appearance, but they are surprisingly comfortable while being secure support when driving enthusiastically. Get hard on the gas, and the 2.0-liter breathes with machined precision, with just enough crackle and rasp through the triple-tip exhaust outlets. And look at the open cargo space of this compact-class liftback.

The Type S steering wheel and driver area

The driver area is designed for hands-on control.

An Engineering Masterwork

The second level of Type S go-power can get blistering through a road course or out on your favorite run where the wild things are. Its wide, 19-inch Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tires are loathe to squeal in pain when pushed hard. And the tread width is essential for stability in a high-power front-drive sports car.

And just look at its bank of safety features and technologies. Integrating race-engineered performance with a powerhouse of electronic driver-assistance functions is an engineering marvel — none of which gets in the way of a good time. (Find more safety technologies in the specs chart at the end of this article.)

The six-speed is keenly precise with electronic rev-matching downshifts. The rev-match can be automatically engaged or canceled. The electronic downshifts can be confusing for those who know how to manually heel-toe downshift. However, I got accustomed to the rev shifts around town and liked the reminder that soon I would be back in the outback for the unfettered pleasure of manual downshifts.

The Type S front seats in Orchid with black microsuede trim

The Type S Orchid interior has baseball stitching and is trimmed in perforated black microsuede.

The Acura Integra Legacy

The Acura Integra had a complete redesign for 2022, and the Integra Type S was added for 2023. The Type S is now in its fifth generation, including the first-gen car for Japan.

The legacy began in North America with the second-generation 1992-93 Integra GS-R. It was followed by the 1997-2001 Integra Type R, then the 2005-06 RSX Type S. The early performance models were coupes, and the 2023 model is the first five-door body style.

Sport Compact Competition

This segment of reasonably priced, high-performance compacts is a storied gathering that includes the Hyundai Elantra N, Subaru WRX, Toyota GR Corolla, VW Golf R, and the Civic Type R.

The Elantra N, Civic Type R, and Acura Integra Type S are front-wheel drive, while the other competing models have all-wheel drive. Some are available with an automatic transmission, but Acura preserves the integrity of hot-shoe driving with only a six-speed manual for the Integra Type S.

It is the Acura-Honda skill at race-spec engineering that transforms a premium sport compact sedan into a purpose-engineered track athlete.

2024 Acura Legacy Type S Pricing

The Acura Integra Type S is a one-spec choice for engine, manual transmission, and equipment. Manufacturer pricing for the Integra Type S starts at $51,995, including the $1,195 freight charge from Marysville, Ohio. The Apex Blue tester came to $55,971, which includes the pearl paint for $600, the carbon fiber tailgate spoiler ($950), premium carpeted floor mats ($240), and the very attractive 19-inch copper alloy wheels for a significant bump of $2,186.

Unique Type S interior features include a serial-number plate, high-bolstered front sport seats in red-and-black microsuede fabric with double red stitching, red floor mats, red ambient LED interior lighting, metal-trimmed sport pedals, aluminum shift knob, red illuminated front door panels.

On the outside, look for the Brembo four-piston aluminum front brake calipers, 19-inch Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tires, gloss black side sills and wing spoiler, center-mounted, and the car’s signature triple outlet exhaust.

There is one no-cost paint color of Lunar Silver Metallic and but six optional colors for $600 each: Apex Blue Pearl, Liquid Carbon Metallic, Majestic Black Pearl, Performance Red Pearl, Tiger Eye Pearl (gold), and Platinum White Pearl.

More Type S features are listed below in the specifications chart.

Finding a new Acura Integra Type S isn’t overly difficult, compared with the outrageous dealer markups for the Civic Type R and its limited availability.

For current Acura pricing check here.  For Acura’s special offers check here.

A front door panel in the Type S shows the bottle holder and some usable storage

Usable front door-panel storage.

Type S vs. Type R

The Integra Type S is a variant of the Honda Civic Type R, but there are notable separators, including body styles. The Integra Type S is the five-door liftback version of the Civic, while the Type R is a four-door sedan. Both have a four-seat 2-plus-2 cabin.

An Acura spokesman said both cars were developed by wholly different teams, with unique buyer and performance targets.

Credentials for the Integra Type S begin with its development by the same team that created the fifth-gen Integra. Led by chief engineer Yoshiaki Akimoto, his previous projects include the second-gen Integra GS-R motor, Honda’s first four-cylinder with VTEC; the S2000 AP1 motor; and Honda’s 2005 F1 engine program.

While both sport compacts share the basic 2.0-liter powertrain, the Integra gets a 5-hp boost. Both, however, have the same torque rating of 310 lb.-ft. from 2,600 to 4,000 rpm. Acura says the Integra Type S has a noticeably different throttle map than the Type R, specifically at half throttle, whereas Integra offers significantly more torque, the spokesman explained.

For the $7,105 price difference for the Integra, it adds such convenience extras as:

Sound deadening is removed for Type R (vs. Civic Touring), whereas Integra Type S maintains the same level of sound isolation as the standard Integra;

Added interior features include:

  • Heated front seats;
  • Power driver seat;
  • ELS 3D Studio Audio;
  • Head Up Display.
The 10.7 inch wide front tire tread

A wide footprint for full contact acceleration.

Integra Type S Assets

  • Vented aluminum hood;
  • A third interior color choice of Orchid (cream) and black is in addition to black, and black and red.
  • A much more compliant suspension tune. The most aggressive mode for Type S (Sport-plus) is comparable to the middle mode (Sport) in the Type R. Type S Sport mode is comparable to the Honda’s Comfort mode. Even in similar settings, the damping profile is quite different (street vs. track focus), the spokesman said;
  • Unique Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tire developed specifically for the Integra Type S. The tread pattern and compound are distinct from the Type R. No CUP2 is offered for Type S.
  • The 19-inch Integra Type S wheel is actually lighter than the Civic Type R wheel.
  • Integra Type S curb weight is just 31 pounds heavier at 3,219 pounds;

Type S Style

The liftback body style gives the Integra Type S a hunky stance with a “flares and chairs” treatment. The Type S is 2.8 inches wider and 0.2-inch longer than the standard Acura Integra. The front track is 3.5 inches wider (to accommodate the wide Michelins), and the rear track is 1.9 inches wider.

The big Acura grille has enhanced engine and brake cooling with a more open diamond pattern (boosting airflow by 170 percent, Acura says). The vented aluminum hood channels air pulled in at the grille to flow up and over the windshield. Large Godfather-like air intakes left and right in the lower front fascia channel airflow through three canards in the inner fender to the big Brembo discs. The smooth rear fascia is designed as a diffuser to channel air and reduce lift.

A view of the engine with a matted red cover over the injectors

A matte red engine cover. (It is in memory of the second-gen Integra Type R.)

Integra Type S Powertrain

The K20C four-cylinder engine is the stuff of dreams for Acura-Honda disciples. In the Type S, the turbocharged and direct-injected VTEC 2.0-liter 4-cylinder has 320 hp, five more than the Civic Type R.

There is an enjoyable rise and fall to the revs to neatly stitch a gear. With the engine’s wide spread of peak torque, shifts do not have to be rushed.

Ease into first gear, roll on power to second, and get ready for liftoff as the torque begins to rush at about 2,400 rpm. Powering through a second-gear turn at 4,000 rpm is inspiring as I lift and slot the shifter for third, then roll on the power — and smile at the reassuring pushback in the seat. That’s when these sport seats are in their element.

And that is also when the 19-inch Michelin Pilot Sport 4 S tires (265/30) are in their playground. These 10.7-inch-wide rollers bring an attack attitude to performance driving.

The tires have an asymmetric tread pattern and a treadwear rating (UTQG, or Uniform Tire Quality Grade)
of 300, which is sticky but not as soft as a racing tire. Acura advises that these “unique high-performance tires” are not designed for winter driving and “will wear more rapidly than normal passenger car tires.”

Replacing a tire will run about $350 — and do not cheap out when it’s time for replacements or risk a compromise to handling performance.

The back end showing the three exhaust tips.

The lower fascia is a diffuser to channel airflow.

Type S Ride and Handling

Acura has mercifully tempered the stiffness of the ride with an adaptive damper system. It takes away the daily bump and grind yet immediately stiffens under pressure.

There also is more soundproofing, but the ride is still a whirlwind at highway speeds. The Acura ELS Studio audio system (unique from the Type R) has 16 speakers, but even this system with 530 watts can’t tame the noise. The ride around town is grainy, which seems contrary to the fairly soft Michelin tires.

The 12-way power driver seat is a major improvement over the Civic’s sport seat. And both front seats seem to have less restrictive shoulder and thigh bolsters.

A consideration is the awkwardly wide 40-foot turning circle. And care must be taken to guard the low front splitter from scraping on driveway entries and road irregularities.

The 2-plus-2 back seat in the Integra Type S

The 2+2 back seat space has snug legroom of 37.4 inches.

Integra Safety Features

Type S safety features include 10 air bags and a complete set of driving-assist technologies (listed below in the specs box). Level 2 semi-autonomous driving assist felt a little skitzy and insistent at the steering wheel. Lane-centering, however, was accurate and reassuring in heavy traffic.

One of my most appreciated technologies is the Traffic Sign Recognition system. It is vital to know the speed limits in this speed-capable Type S.

Driving-Assistance Technologies

Layered into the safety electronics of all Acura Integras are:

Collision Mitigation Braking; Road Departure Mitigation; Adaptive Cruise Control; Lane Keeping Assist; Forward Collision Warning; Lane Departure Warning; Traffic Sign Recognition System; Auto High-Beam Headlights; Driver Attention Monitor; Blind Spot Information System with Cross Traffic Monitor;

Cargo space showing two bags of garden soil.

Functional cargo space for weekend tasks or gear for the autocross.

Chassis Components

Suspension: Adaptive damper system; dual-axis MacPherson front struts, rear multi-link; stabilizer bars front (tubular) and rear (solid);

Steering: Dual-pinion, variable-ratio electric power steering; 2.1 turns lock to lock;

Brakes: Power-assisted and ventilated 2-piece front discs, solid rear; 13.8-inch rotors front, 12 inches rear; Brembo 4-piston aluminum front calipers;

Tires-Wheels: 19-inch Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tires (265/30); 19-inch matte black alloy wheels; tire-repair kit.

A front end close up to show the Large air intakes aid aerodynamics by channeling air through three canards to the inner fender.

Large air intakes aid aerodynamics by channeling air through three canards to the inner fender.

Why Buy the 2024 Acura Integra Type S?

There are decades of Honda race-engineering woven into the character of the Type S, which is a badge of honor to those who know. But it comes at a significant price. I did not see value in the $950 carbon fiber tailgate spoiler or the copper alloy wheels ($2,186), saving $3,136. And there is only one no-cost paint color of Lunar Silver Metallic, so most buyers will likely choose one of the other six $600 paint colors.

Don’t waste your money if you don’t value the mechanics of driving. It’s the rev of the engine, the machined smoothness of the manual transmission, and how the suspension loads and unloads as the driver navigates a winding road. It’s a delicious sensation, too good not to be repeated.

Compared with the Honda Civic Type R, the Integra Type S is the car for grown-ups. The Type S is a little more compliant and a little more comfortable, though I wouldn’t want to commute long distances in either. But the driving rush felt the same to me.

With my recent CTR test, I couldn’t sense that much difference between the two. My choice would be the Type S. Its cargo space makes it a little more of a dual-use sports car, and mom or the significant other would undoubtedly approve.

2024 Acura Integra Type S Specifications

Body style: compact, front-wheel-drive 5-door, 4-seat high-performance sedan

Engine: 320-hp, turbocharged and direct-injected 2.0-liter 4-cylinder; 310 lb.-ft. torque from 2,600-4,000 rpm

Transmission: 6-speed manual with rev-matching downshifts

Fuel economy: 21/28/24 mpg city/hwy/combined; premium fuel recommended

0-60 mph acceleration: 5.1 seconds (per zeroto60times.com)

BY THE NUMBERS

Fuel tank: 12.4 gallons

Cargo space: 24.3 cubic feet

Front head/leg room: 38.6/42.3 inches

Rear head/leg room: 36.4/37.4 inches

Length/wheelbase: 186/107.7 inches

Height/width: 55.4/74.8 inches

Curb weight: 3,219 pounds

Turning circle: 39.7 feet

FEATURES

Standard equipment includes: Smartkey entry with push-button start, multi-angle rearview camera with dynamic guidelines, 12-way power front seats with lumbar, 10.2-inch driver info screen, 12-speaker Bose sound System with subwoofer, 9-inch color touchscreen (with volume knob, customizable feature settings and smart shortcuts), electric parking brake, Bluetooth phone and audio, Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, 2.5-amp USB smartphone-audio port (front), 2.5-amp USB charging port, 12-volt power outlet (front), wireless charging pad, sliding sun visors, LED map lights, cargo area cover;

Type S features, interior: Type S sport-appearance package, serial-number plate, high-bolstered front sport seats with black or Orchid microsuede fabric, black floor mats, ambient LED interior lighting, leather-wrapped steering wheel, metal-trimmed sport pedals, leather-wrapped shift knob, illuminated front door panels, active sound control;

Type S Exterior: Brembo 4-piston aluminum front brake calipers, 19-inch matte black alloy wheels, Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tires, aluminum hood, Type S badges front and rear, gloss black side sills, gloss black wing spoiler, center-mounted, triple outlet exhaust with active exhaust valve, gloss black side mirrors with LED turn signals;

Safety features include: 10 air bags, stability and traction controls, brake distribution, brake assist, and hill-start assist

Driving-Assist Technologies

Collision Mitigation Braking, Road Departure Mitigation; Adaptive Cruise Control;
Lane Keeping Assist; Forward Collision Warning; Lane Departure Warning;
Traffic Sign Recognition System; Auto High-Beam Headlights; Driver Attention Monitor; Blind Spot Information System with Cross Traffic Monitor;

PRICING

Base Type S price: $51,995, including $1,195 freight charge; price as tested $55,971

Options on test vehicle: Apex Blue Pearl paint $600; carbon fiber tailgate spoiler $950; premium carpet floor mats $240; 19-inch copper alloy wheels $2,186

Where assembled: Marysville, Ohio

Warranty: 4-years/50,000-miles bumper to bumper; 6-years/70,000-miles powertrain

Acura MDX Type S Review

Acura MDX Type S Review

As Acura’s flagship, the 2024 MDX Type S is race-engineered for high performance with standard Super Handling all-wheel drive

The 2024 Acura MDX Type S with a marina background

The 2023 Acura MDX Type S is sold in two trim levels, starting at $69,345 and $74,695 for the 2023 Acura MDX Type S Advance, today’s tester. (Photos by Mark Maynard or as credited)

Table of Contents

Type S Finesse
20 Years of Acura MDX
2024 Acura MDX Pricing
MDX Type S Assets
MDX Type S Powertrain
Interior Function
9 Cool Things
What’s It Like To Drive?
Back Seats and Cargo
Why Buy the 2024 Acura MDX Type S?
Specifications 

BY MARK MAYNARD

The new Acura MDX Type S is a brand shaper. For those who ponder the point of Honda’s luxury division, Acura is making a statement for technology and performance with its first Type S performance treatment for the midsize MDX SUV.

Sportiness and performance have always been the Acura mantra, but differentiation is more difficult now as many mainstream vehicles have easy supplier access to higher-performance technologies. TV ads of a car or an SUV barnstorming along city streets or sliding along an off-road trail are just so ho-hum.

It was time for a brand makeover in 2022 when Acura brought out “its most radical transformation” of the MDX since the launch of the first-generation model 20 years ago. Acura says it is a quantum leap forward with a bold exterior design and sophisticated new interior. With its role as flagship, Acura specially engineered the MDX Type S for high performance with standard Super Handling all-wheel drive.

The Type S top display screen turns red in Sport mode

The red mist of Sport mode in the top display screen.

Type S Finesse

Acura leverages engineering influence from its halo supercar, the NSX. Though the hybrid electric NSX was taken out of production last year, Acura gave it a sendoff with a limited run of 350 Type S models, each starting at about $172,000. However, according to Automotive News, the NSX might return in 2026 as an electric variant. Acura says, however, that a third-generation is not in development.

Today, the Type S performance treatment also has been applied to the Integra Type S compact hatchback ($51,000), and the TLX Type S midsize sport sedan ($57,745). The only other model in the brand’s four-vehicle lineup without the Type S option is the RDX compact SUV.

Acura will add a fifth vehicle to its lineup early next year with the battery-electric 2024 ZDX and 500-hp ZDX Type S. The ZDX is the brand’s first step as it shifts to become an all-electric brand by 2040, Acura says. ZDX Details are here.

The upcoming Acura ZDX electric crossover

2024 Acura ZDX Type S reveal during the mid-August Monterey Car Week 2023. (Acura)

And learn about Acura’s other future vehicles here.

20 Years of MDX

The fourth-generation 2024 Acura MDX follows the evolutionary footsteps of the first-gen model of 2001-2006, followed by the second-gen of 2007-2013, and the third from 2014-2022. The current model had a complete redesign and re-engineering for 2022.

The Acura MDX and the Honda Pilot share a platform, but their missions separate at birth. The Pilot is the mainstream family SUV with more off-roading credentials; the MDX is the luxury choice emphasizing tech and performance.

Acura refers to the MDX as “the best-selling, 3-row luxury SUV of all time,” though Lexus and BMW might object with their currently higher-selling SUVs, the Lexus RX and BMW X5. Other midsize luxury SUVs include the Audi Q7 and Q8, BMW X5, Genesis GV80, Infiniti QX60, and Lincoln Aviator.

But the MDX is Acura’s top-selling model, narrowly outselling the smaller RDX SUV.

The Acura MDX dual cockpit dashboard layout

The dual-cockpit dashboard is also engaging for the passenger.

2024 Acura MDX Pricing

Sold in two trim levels, the 2023 Acura MDX Type S starts at $69,345 and the 2023 Acura MDX Type S Advance, today’s tester, starts at $74,695. Retail pricing includes the $1,195 freight charge from East Liberty, Ohio, and 2 years or 24,000 miles of free scheduled maintenance.

My tester came to $75,295, including options for Liquid Carbon metallic paint ($600); Acura logo pattern LED lighting (from the side mirror) $188; and illuminated door sill trim for $459.

Standard MDX Type S features are substantial, including keyless entry with push-button ignition, panoramic moonroof with tilt and slide, acoustic laminate windshield and front side glass, 12.3-inch Acura Precision Cockpit gauge information, and a 12.3-inch HD dual-content center touchpad digital display. The long list of features is below in the specifications.

The Advance package adds Acura’s first massaging front seats; Milano leather in a curvilinear quilting pattern; an option for the new Azurite Blue interior color; and a 25-speaker ELS Studio 3D Signature Edition audio system.

New paint colors include a deep Fathom Blue Pearl and Phantom Violet Pearl, a deep purple. Both colors are just a $600 option. There also is the Type S exclusive hue of Tiger Eye Pearl (gold).

Choosing Liquid Carbon paint also adds the choice of a red interior with black and silver accents and gray stylized wood trim. The red is a gorgeous blue-red and is liberally applied throughout the cabin.

Pricing for the standard MDX with 3.5-liter V-6 ranges from about $50,000 for front-wheel drive to $65,000 with Super Handling AWD.

Check here for current Acura MDX pricing. And find special Acura pricing offers here.

The front door panel with bottle storage

Storage with style.

MDX Type S Assets

Acura’s “Precision Crafted Performance” tagline becomes more apparent with the MDX Type S treatment and the Advance package.

For the added $10,000 above the standard MDX, here are some of the Type S performance enhancements:

  • A new front fascia with a more aggressive-looking front spoiler, functional side air inlets, and an open-surface Diamond Pentagon grille, which also increases airflow to the engine bay;
  • A more aggressively styled rear fascia with four large round exhaust outlets;
  • Gloss black wheel arches and lower body trim;
  • Brembo four-piston front calipers with 14.3-inch ventilated discs. Non-Brembo rear braking is weighty with solid 13-inch discs;
  • First use of a double-wishbone front suspension.

9 Cool Things About MDX

Acura’s attention to detail reinforces pride of ownership for spending $75,000. Here are some features I liked:

  • Door-lock sensors in front and rear doors. I appreciated this simple addition every time I opened the side doors and could lock the door without using the key fob or stepping forward to the front door sensor.
  • Milano leather-trimmed upholstery. It is impressively stitched and precisely installed throughout the cabin.
  • Dual LED lights in the upper tailgate, plus an overhead cargo light;

    Convenient tailgate closer switch, a 12-volt power outlet, and a bag hook.

    Convenient tailgate closer switch, a 12-volt power outlet, and a bag hook.

  • Numerous USB charging ports. Acura gives us the new USB-C fast-charge ports with a few of the older USB-A style for those of us still with an iPhone lightning cable.
  • Large capacity side door storage, fits big and tall bottles;
  • Camera activation switch, in the end of the turn signal stalk;
  • Grab handles above each door, with jacket hooks in the second-row handles;
  • Convenient tailgate closer switch on the side of cargo area, packaged with a 12-volt power outlet, and a bag hook.
  • U.S. built, designed, and engineered.

MDX Safety Technologies

Among the MDX safety credentials are eight air bags, and Agile Handling Assist with traction and stability controls.

Also standard are the driving-assist technologies of Acura Watch. Among those technologies are:

  • Adaptive cruise control;
  • Collision mitigation braking;
  • Forward collision warning;
  • Lane-departure warning and lane-keeping assist;
  • Road-departure mitigation;
  • Traffic-jam assist;
  • Auto high-beam assist;
  • Traffic sign recognition.

Calibration of the Level 2 hands-on-the-wheel driver assistance gives good lane centering. The guidance is reasonably consistent without having alert meltdowns in low-light levels or other traffic variables that can cancel the system.

I especially rely on traffic sign recognition, which shows in the gauge array or the head-up windshield display.

The self-sealing 21-inch Continental CrossContact RX high-performance all-season tires.

Self-sealing 21-inch Continental CrossContact RX high-performance all-season tires.

MDX Type S Powertrain

Unique to the MDX S-Type is its turbocharged, 3.0-liter V-6. The Type S twin-scroll turbocharged 3.0-liter helps spool up 355 horsepower and 354 foot-pounds of torque from 1,400-5,000 rpm. (The standard issue MDX V-6 has 290 horsepower and a fuel-sparing 267 lb.ft. of torque at a high 4,700 rpm.)

Other credentials for the Type S engine include:

  • Reinforced engine block with six-bolt main caps for durability and rigidity;
  • Forged crankshaft and connecting rods;
  • A fully square 86mm bore and stroke.
  • Increased cooling. Small subradiators behind both front inner fenders flank the turbo intercooler below the main radiator.
The 355 hp twin-scroll turbocharged and direct-injected 3.0-liter V-6.

The 355 hp twin-scroll turbocharged and direct-injected 3.0-liter V-6.

Transmission, Suspension, and SH-AWD

Also beefed up is the 10-speed automatic transmission. It is tuned for quicker downshifts and faster upshifts in Sport-plus mode.

Acura’s fourth-generation Super Handling All Wheel Drive is improved with expanded torque vectoring for cornering control. In normal driving, 70 percent of engine power is sent to the rear axle, with up to a 100 percent split left to right.

Its air suspension with automatic load leveling and active dampers is unique to the MDX Type S. The electronic system will lower for passenger entry and exit. And, in Sport mode, the suspension lowers 15mm (a little more than a half inch), and for snow or off-road travel, the body rises by 50mm (almost 2 inches).

Acura gave its big SUV a significant presence with 21-inch Continental CrossContact RX high-performance all-season tires. The self-sealing ContiSeal tires are a first for Acura, which gives a better ride quality than run flats. There is enough sidewall height to the 275/40 tires that curb scrapes to the Berlina Black alloy wheels can be avoided, plus the camera system gives a curb view.

A low angle view of the rear MDX showing the undercarriage and dual exhaust system

A quad exhaust salute to Type S power.

Type S Fuel Economy

Official fuel-economy ratings are 17 mpg city, 21 highway, and 19 mpg combined, using the recommended premium fuel. Most of my week’s driving returned an average mpg of 18.6, dipping into the 17s when exercising Sport mode. The 18.5-gallon tank gives a wide cruising radius, but fill-ups can be painful with my city’s current $6-plus-a-gallon 91 octane.

The long and wide center console in the MDX

The front console has a creative design for the wireless charging pad, a quasi-phone slot, a pop-up module for the USB ports, and the “True Touchpad Interface.”

What’s It Like To Drive 

The MDX Type S is not a howling wolf, nor is it a namby-pamby. Its slightly elevated exhaust voice will be acceptable to most enthusiasts.

Big brakes, big tires, all-wheel drive, and luxurious appointments raise the MDX Type S curb weight to 4,788 pounds, the heaviest of all MDX trim levels. Yet, the Type S powertrain shrugs off the weight and delivers a fit and controllable experience. Floor the accelerator in Sport mode, and the V-6 takes a big gulp and powers to 0-60 mph acceleration in 5.5 to 6 seconds, according to online reports. But the force is more appreciable from about 45 to 65 mph when the engine is solidly in its torque band.

It is a refined driving experience all around. The brakes have absolute stopping force without grab and pitch. The steering wheel glides smoothly through the hand and never feels heavy-handed. Laminated windshield and side glass help provide a traffic-calmed interior.

At 16.5 feet long, the MDX looks big at the curb but drives smaller. Those big 21-inch Continental tires help boost the turning circle to a wide 40.5 feet. Inexplicably, however, the MDX curls easily into cramped parking spaces.

Performance modes of Normal or Comfort are capable purveyors of power — until you discover Sport mode. It cranks up the attitude, and the quad exhaust clears its throat to a nicely machined bellow.

The drive-mode system of Lift, Snow, Comfort, Normal, Sport, and Sport-plus can modify such elements as throttle response, steering weight, and suspension firmness. I used Comfort or Normal on the Interstate and Sport for everything else.

Sightlines are open across the hood and out the back glass. Broad side mirrors can get in the way while turning but don’t create major blind spots.

The second row 3 seat bench

A flat floor and 38.5 inches of max legroom.

MDX Interior Function

Take away the Acura “A” on the steering wheel, and you’d be stumped to guess this is a Honda product. The cabin has quality materials with meticulous fit, but it is not overly dressed for family duty.

The MDX feels larger than a “midsize” SUV and more of a “large-midsize,” particularly with the open cabin and 50/50 third-row seats.

I especially like the dual-cockpit layout, which gives the impression of a command center. The three-spoke, flat-bottom steering wheel has a secure leather-wrapped fit in the hands. Robust metal-trimmed pedals and driver’s footrest send a message of performance.

The front seats have broad elbow room and tall headroom of 38.5 inches — with a panoramic sunroof. Especially enjoyable are the 16-way power sport seats (heated and ventilated seats) with power lumbar. Tall adults can dial in a comfortable position with the power seat-bottom thigh extenders and adjustable side bolsters. There also is a nine-way massage function with choices of “Wave,” “Shiatsu,” and “Awake.”

Both MDX trim levels are well packaged at this price point with the expected conveniences and driver-assist technologies. However, a cargo cover is not included, but there is a luxury-priced roller cover for $321. With all the smash-and-grab stories, a roller cargo cover is almost a safety feature.

The flat bottom steering wheel

The MDX Type S command center.

Information Overload

The 12.3-inch-wide infotainment screen has a 60/40 split for dual feeds and the surround-view camera system with a rear washer. But there also is some information overload. The dashboard layout is very noisy with numbers, graphics, screens, knobs, and dials. It is the antithesis of the minimalist Tesla Model X instrument panel with its 17-inch tablet touchscreen.

A Tesla Model X driver area is a minimalist design

Compare the “noise” of the MDX Type S dashboard with the minimalist Tesla Model X treatment with just a 17-inch tablet touchscreen.

The wide driver gauge display is busy with numbers, as are the many functions on the steering wheel. Many cabin controls are tightly grouped in the center module of the instrument panel. The tight space requires smallish buttons and switches, which can take eyes from the road to adjust. There are, however, a separate audio volume knob and rocker switch to advance channels.

And while that infotainment display looks like a touchscreen, it’s not — no matter how many times I reached to tap an icon. Access instead is via a small “True Touchpad Interface” pad on the center console. It just takes finger movements to scroll among the features, but it takes time to adapt to how it works. A robust wrist brace helps the transition, but I’d rather have a touchscreen.

50/50 folding third-row seats.

50/50 folding third-row seats.

MDX Back Seats and Cargo Space

There is no shortage of back-seat features, but squeezing a third row into a five-seat SUV is a shuffle compromise of back-seat space. Passengers in the second row have a flat floor for three-across occasional seating and 38.5 inches of max legroom. There are a few inches of fore-aft slide to help with more legroom in the third row. And the seatbacks recline a few inches, but the seat bottoms are short on adult thigh support.

Electronic climate controls include temperature, fan speed, and vent direction. Below are two charging USB ports, a 12-volt plug, and a household outlet.

Use the “hidden” storage well to corral grocery bags or dump wet or muddy sports gear.

The “hidden” storage.

Access to the third row is by a manual tip-and-slide function. For kids getting out of that space, a button on the second-row seatback springs the seat forward. Third-row legroom is tight at 29.1 inches, but there are charging USBs at both seats and a cup/box holder.

Functionally, the third row folds flat for broad cargo space, and there is deep basement storage with a reversible lid with a hard plastic underside; Acura calls that “Hidden Cargo Storage.”

MDX cargo area with third row folded

The third row folds flat.

Cargo entry width is 48 inches by 29 inches in height. Fold the third row for 47 inches in length, or fold both rows for about 6 ½ feet of board and ladder length.

Why Buy the 2024 Acura MDX Type S?

Acura’s Type S engineering creates a durable and sustainable performance level. It is not of the extreme power and performance of such competitors as the Audi SQ7, BMW M60i, or the Mercedes-AMG GLE. All these models start at about $90,000 and are pushing 500- to 600-horsepower.

As enthusiasts, we all like big horsepower, but the $15,000 price difference for the MDX Type S buys a lot of gasoline and a generous family vacation. And the MDX Type S is still an accommodating road-trip cruiser without such a firm ride that it becomes monotonous after a few hours.

And when considering the long-term maintenance and repair costs of an Acura vs. a BMW or Audi, the MDX is the clear winner. Acura does provide a new-vehicle warranty of 4 years or 50,000 miles bumper to bumper, with an Acura maintenance program of 2 years or 24,000 miles.

A hot-rod SUV with seven seats is almost an oxymoron, but Acura must maintain seating for family versatility — with the Type S edge. But could Acura find success with a five-seat version? Or even a four-seat “executive” package, removing the third row to add more second-row legroom?

Acura’s interior finesse and race engineering to modify and reinforce the MDX S Type are a proud statement.

Another rear view

2024 Acura MDX Type S Advance Specifications

Body style: large-midsize, 3-row, 7-seat SUV with Super Handling AWD

Engine: 355-hp twin-scroll turbocharged and direct-injected 3.0-liter V-6; 354 lb.-ft. torque from 1,400-5,000 rpm

Transmission: 10-speed automatic with paddle shifters; Integrated Dynamics System drive modes of Normal, Comfort, Economy, Sport, and Sport-plus

Fuel economy: 17/21/19 mpg city/hwy/combined; premium unleaded fuel recommended

Max towing capacity: 5,000 pounds with AWD

0-60 mph acceleration: 5.5 seconds

BY THE NUMBERS

Fuel tank: 18.5 gallons

Cargo space: 16.3 to 39.1 cubic feet

Front head/leg room: 38.5/41.6 inches

2nd-row head/leg room: 38.1/38.5 inches

3rd-row head/leg room: 36.2/29.1 inches

Length/wheelbase: 198.4/113.8 inches

Width/height: 78.7/67.1 inches

Curb weight: 4,788 pounds

Turning circle: 40.5 feet

FEATURES

Standard equipment includes: keyless entry with push-button ignition, panoramic moonroof with tilt and slide, acoustic laminate windshield and front side glass, heated front seats, electric parking brake, 12.3-inch Acura Precision Cockpit driver information, 12.3-inch HD dual-content center touchpad digital display, wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, Cabin Talk (speaker system), Cabin Control smartphone app for climate and audio control, USB-A and USB-C charging ports, 50/50 split 3rd-row bench, hidden cargo storage with reversible lid;

Type S Package: Adaptive air suspension, Acura navigation with real-time traffic routing, rear cross-traffic monitor, front and rear parking sensors, second-row side-window sunshades, leather-wrapped flat-bottom steering wheel, ventilated front seats, heated power side mirrors with reverse tilt-down, LED fog lights, ebony headliner, stainless-steel trimmed sport pedals, wireless phone charging pad, Iconic Drive ambient LED cabin lighting (27 colors) along the doors, first-row footwell, instrument panel, console, and door pocket;

Advance package includes: surround-view camera system with rear camera washer, 25-speaker ELS Studio 3D Signature Edition audio system, 16-way power front sport seats with 9-way massage, 10.5-inch head-up display, perforated Milano premium leather-trimmed sport seats with contrast stitching and piping, stylized wood trim (dark gray in the tester), heated steering wheel, power lift tailgate with hands-free access and walk-away close, roof rails, heated second-row seats;

Safety features include: 8 air bags; Agile Handling Assist with traction and stability controls; hill-start assist;

Acura Watch features: Adaptive cruise control; collision mitigation braking; forward collision warning; lane-departure warning; lane-keeping assist; road-departure mitigation; traffic-jam assist; auto high-beam assist.

SUSPENSION COMPONENTS

Suspension: Adaptive air suspension with auto-leveling; double-wishbone front, rear multilink; 30.5mm solid front stabilizer bar, 21.7mm rear bar

Steering: Belt-driven variable-ratio electric power assist; 40.5-foot turning circle

Braking: Brembo 4-piston front calipers with ventilated 14.3-inch front discs, solid 13-inch rear discs

Tires-Wheels: 275/40 R21 Continental CrossContact RX ContiSeal high-performance all-season self-sealing tires; Berlina Black alloy wheels with machined face

PRICING

Base price: $74,695, including $1,195 freight charge; price as tested $75,295

Options on test vehicle: Liquid Carbon metallic paint $600; Acura Logo pattern LED lighting (from side mirror) $188; illuminated door sill trim $459

Where assembled: East Liberty, Ohio

Warranties: 4-years/50,000-miles bumper to bumper; Acura maintenance program 2-years/24,000-miles; 6-years/50,000-miles powertrain