2025 Morgan Plus Four: Coming to America
The wait is almost over. Soon American Morgan enthusiasts will be able to motor along on four wheels as well as three.
Swap the steering wheel from the right to the left and the car you see here is what will land at the docks in early 2025. Sold under the replica car bill, Morgan will be able to deliver up to 325 cars per year (almost doubling the current Plus Four production). And, although order books aren’t even officially open, the company says the first couple of hundred cars have already been earmarked for eager owners willing to pay somewhere in the region of $74,500.
In readying the car for its American adventure, Morgan initiated a range of updates to the Plus Four’s styling, suspension, and technology. Like any Morgan modification you’ll need to go macro to spot the changes. Outwardly it still looks like it was born in the 1950s (which the Plus 4 was), but put this latest model alongside the outgoing car—first introduced in 2020—and you might just spot some subtleties. Re-profiling of the front and rear wings, the new eight-inch headlamps that incorporate turn signals, and a matte graphite front splitter all stand out. At the rear there are now just two tail lights instead of four and a simplified diffuser. Those classic-looking chrome mirrors are actually new as well.
Moving inside, there’s nothing obvious to see with the changes focused on in-car entertainment and lighting. It remains a delightful mix of old and new, with wood veneer, aluminum, leather, and deep-pile woolen carpets. The BMW-sourced gear selector and steering column look a little out of place, but that’s the price of progress.
Beneath the bodywork, the two-liter BMW twin-turbo engine and eight-speed automatic transmission are unaltered. Morgan has updated the suspension, though, with new spring rates and re-valved dampers. A new Dynamic Handling Pack is available, featuring adjustable Nitron suspension that provides new springs and single-way adjustable damping along with an adjustable spring platform, as well as the addition of a rear anti-roll bar.
I spent many miles on motorways and mountain roads in a Plus Four in 2023. With that experience still relatively fresh in my mind, my time with the new iteration quickly yielded some clear differences.
Immediately obvious is a somewhat stiffer ride. It’s not unpleasant, but you certainly feel the bumps a bit more than before. The trade-off is a chassis that’s perhaps just a little easier to play with. Even with the car’s stability systems in place and on a dry road, it’s perfectly possible to provoke the rear Avon tires into a smidge of a slide coming off a roundabout with an early application of the accelerator. The car I drove to Switzerland was on winter rubber and would also move around, but it now feels more predictable and easier to control.
This sort of behavior is rather at odds with the car’s classic looks, even more so when you switch the driving mode to Sport Plus and the BMW motor accompanies every throttle lift with the type of pops and bangs you normally hear from a modded 2-Series.
As a result, while the Plus Four can cover ground remarkably quickly when deploying its full 258 horses, sprinting to 62mph in scant 4.8 seconds, and gobbling up corners with gusto, it feels just a bit wrong to do so.
For most of my time I simply pottered around in auto mode, not troubling the plastic paddle-shifters (which would be much nicer in metal) and savoring the sounds of my playlist more than the motor. The updated Sennheiser stereo system is easy to pair by Bluetooth and has plenty of power. So much so, in fact, that you feel the bass through your butt almost as much as you hear it. It will even almost overpower the wind noise at 70 mph whether the roof is down or up.
On that topic, it’s not the work of a moment to raise or lower the canvas—it requires getting out of the car to do so. The side screens are also removable and, on delivery the driver’s side didn’t make a good seal with the windscreen pillar and took several attempts to readjust it. I’m sure that with familiarity it would become less fiddly.
This minor niggle aside, the Plus Four is no more difficult to live with than any other roadster. It’s a doddle to drive when you want it to be, but can turn on the taps when you reach your favorite road, and all the while offering the charming good looks of yesteryear.
In other words, it’ll be worth the wait.
Still neat as hell after all these years! Kind of like me. 🙂
You sound fun!
I like these cars but don’t follow them. Is the frame still fabricated from wood? Please tell me “NO”!
It may be the most mis-understood feature of the Morgan sports cars, but the wood frame is what the hand-crafted body tub and panels are affixed to. The chassis beneath the attached wooden frames has always been made of steel, –simple and strong. It is sad to hear that only automatics will be brought in, so I’ll just stick with my 1957 Plus Four 4 seater thank you.
I would say it’s too bad they couldn’t turn off the pops and bangs on the tune as well as have some other kind of more looks appropriate gear selector, but that is a minor complaint.
I love Morgans and owned a 1971 +8 for 22 years. I am delighted to see this finally coming here, but I’ve been told it will come only with the automatic transmission. For me, that is a monumental crying shame, and an absolute dealbreaker. Is bringing it in under the replica bill a change from the previous plan? If so, would that allow more flexibility regarding emissions? Could this mean that, just maybe, we’ll get the manual transmission also?
Me too…they had me until the words ‘8 speed automatic…’.
This looks like it would be so fun to drive with a manual transmission.
“…in 1994, the Canadian government banned the import of new Morgan automobiles because the Britain-based company refused to perform the crash tests necessary to acquire a Canadian government safety certificate.
“The company would have had to crash three cars at $50,000 to $100,000 a pop just to sell maybe six new ones a year, which is the likely market here.” I wonder if they had to crash one now in order to get this one into the North American market? BTW, Where are the front fog lights, the front signal lights and most important, the leather belt over the bonnet?
I am happy with my’67 Morgan 4/4 and have no intention of ever selling it. I rebuilt the Ford 1600 cc engine years ago and it will outlive me by many years.
What company are selling these cars and when are they coming to market in America 2025 Morgans