Top 20+ American Cars That Deserve More Love

Underrated American Icons

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

Some cars shine bright, while others quietly fade into obscurity despite having every reason to be remembered. Across decades, American automakers have built machines that broke conventions and pushed performance boundaries. Yet, for all their innovation, many have slipped through the cracks of mainstream recognition. Here, we’ll shine a spotlight on forgotten brilliance. If you love surprises on four wheels, check out these 20 cars.

1. Pontiac G8 GXP

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

Coming with a 6.2L LS3 V8 producing 415 horsepower, the G8 GXP offered a 6-speed manual transmission, rare for full-size sedans. This car was built in Australia and rebadged as a Pontiac. It could go 0–60 mph in just 4.5 seconds.

2. Buick Reatta

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

The Reatta was hand-assembled in a special facility called the “Craft Centre” and flaunted a touchscreen-based control system years ahead of its time. The interior design was inspired by futuristic aerospace tech, and it had a built-in diagnostic system accessible by the driver.

3. Ford SVT Contour

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

Developed by Ford’s Special Vehicle Team for performance handling, the car used a 2.5L V6 engine co-developed with Porsche. Its suspension was tuned on European roads for precision, and it redlined at 6750 RPM—a rarity for American sedans.

4. AMC Eagle

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

This was the first American car to combine 4WD with a unibody sedan. Introduced in 1980, it predated the SUV boom by nearly 20 years. The Eagle could handle off-road trails without sacrificing ride comfort, and even the police used it for snowy terrains in the Northeast.

5. Oldsmobile Aurora

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

The futuristic design of the Aurora heavily influenced the rest of Oldsmobile’s lineup. It was powered by a 4.0L Northstar-derived V8 producing 250 horsepower and crash-tested by GM to withstand 40 mph rear impacts. Zero visible body seams on it was a styling achievement for its time.

6. Saturn Sky Red Line

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

With a 260-horsepower turbocharged 2.0L engine, this car was GM’s most powerful four-cylinder at the time. Built on the Kappa platform, it was mechanically related to the Pontiac Solstice. It could reach 60 mph in under 5.5 seconds.

7. Chevrolet Corvair

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

The Corvair was the only American mass-market car with a rear-mounted air-cooled engine. It featured independent suspension all around and inspired Porsche-like handling in an affordable package. The engine shares format traits with aircraft boxer engines. Ralph Nader’s criticism fueled its cult following.

8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

Here comes one of the few manual transmission wagons ever sold in the U.S. The CTS-V Wagon packed a supercharged 6.2L V8 from the Corvette ZR1 and could outrun a Porsche Panamera Turbo to 60 mph. Only 514 manual wagons were built.

9. Dodge Magnum SRT8

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

The aggressive styling of the Magnum SRT8 turned heads like a muscle car should. It was the only American muscle wagon of its era and could haul drywall and run 13-second quarter miles. Today, the Magnum SRT8 enjoys a cult following among muscle car collectors.

10. Mercury Marauder

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

A 302-hp 4.6L DOHC V8 from the Mustang Mach 1 powered the Marauder, and the all-black paint option gave it instant sleeper appeal. With a name dating back to the 1960s muscle era, it had a performance-tuned suspension and limited-slip differential.

11. Chevrolet SS

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

Less than 13,000 were sold in the U.S., making the SS—a rebadged Holden Commodore—a future classic. It came with a 6.2L V8 and 415 horsepower, borrowed from the Camaro SS, and offered a 6-speed manual and Magnetic Ride Control suspension.

12. Plymouth Prowler

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

The Prowler design was inspired by classic hot rods but factory-built. An aluminum-intensive structure was used for weight savings. While it had no manual option, it still looked like a dragster. The rear wheels were 20 inches tall—massive for the late 1990s.

13. Lincoln LS V8

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

Riding on the same platform as the Jaguar S-Type, the LS also offered a 5-speed manual. The optional 3.9L V8 made it a true sports sedan, and the chassis tuning was done by Ford of Europe. Motor Trend named it Car of the Year in 2000.

14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

This was Motor Trend’s Car of the Year in 1989. It had a 3.8L supercharged V6, making 210–230 horsepower, and was capable of 0.95g on the skidpad, which was astonishing for its weight. Other features were adjustable electronic suspension and anti-lock brakes.

15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

Only around 1,200 coupe versions were built. Using the same 2.0L turbo engine as the Saturn Sky Red Line, it had no trunk lid—cargo access was via the hatch. The coupe had a perfect 50/50 weight distribution.

16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

Sharing its platform with the Mitsubishi 3000GT VR-4, this car came with AWD, four-wheel steering, and twin turbos. It was one of the most advanced cars of the early ’90s, and pop-up headlights and active aero gave it JDM flair.

17. Chevrolet HHR SS

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

This car was marketed as a “modern hot rod for utility lovers.” Using a 260-hp turbo engine from the Cobalt SS, it also featured a 5-speed manual and track-tuned suspension. GM’s Performance Division calibrated it on the Nürburgring, and the panel version had no rear seats.

18. Buick GNX

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

The GNX ran the quarter-mile in 12.7 seconds—faster than a Ferrari 328. Even though the turbocharged V6 made 276 hp, it was underrated. Only 547 GNXs were made, and all were in black. It used a unique suspension setup for better launches.

19. Ford Flex EcoBoost

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

Offering AWD and third-row seating for family practicality, the Flex EcoBoost came with a 3.5L twin-turbo V6 producing 355 hp. Its styling was inspired by vintage wood-paneled wagons. Despite its looks, it could hit 60 mph in under 6 seconds.

20. Jeep Comanche

1. Pontiac G8 GXP, 2. Buick Reatta, 3. Ford SVT Contour, 4. AMC Eagle, 5. Oldsmobile Aurora, 6. Saturn Sky Red Line, 7. Chevrolet Corvair, 8. Cadillac CTS-V Wagon, 9. Dodge Magnum SRT8, 10. Mercury Marauder, 11. Chevrolet SS, 12. Plymouth Prowler, 13. Lincoln LS V8, 14. Ford Thunderbird Super Coupe, 15. Pontiac Solstice Coupe, 16. Dodge Stealth R/T Twin Turbo, 17. Chevrolet HHR SS, 18. Buick GNX, 19. Ford Flex EcoBoost, 20. Jeep Comanche

Nowadays, collectors praise the simplicity and durability of the Comanche. Using the same platform and drivetrain as the Jeep Cherokee, it offered part-time 4WD and a payload rating of over 1,400 lbs. In the front, it had unibody construction, and in the rear, body-on-frame.