
Now available at Premier GT is this Nissan GT-R Nismo, finished in Jet Black Pearl Metallic over a Black Leather & Red Suede Interior and covering 20,000 miles from new.
There are cars that make you look at numbers, and then there are cars that make you feel something deeper. The Nissan GT-R Nismo belongs firmly to the latter.
This particular example, a UK-supplied 2016 (66) car, stands as one of the most focused and finely honed versions of the R35 generation. With its 3.8-litre twin-turbo V6 producing 592 bhp, every throttle input feels like a direct line to the car’s motorsport DNA. But it’s not just the performance that makes it special, it’s what it represents.
After nearly two decades of relentless evolution, the R35 GT-R has finally bowed out of production. There will be other cars to wear the GT-R badge, no doubt, but never again one like this. Never again the raw, mechanical intensity of a hand-built twin-turbo engine, the precise thrum of its dual-clutch gearbox, or the unmistakable feel of Nissan’s most singular creation.
The Nismo sits at the pinnacle of that story. Carbon-fibre bodywork, RAYS forged alloys, bespoke suspension tuning and subtle flashes of red mark it out as something truly rare. A car engineered not for showrooms, but for sensation. Each panel, each component, feels like the culmination of years of obsessive refinement; a final chapter written in carbon, titanium and boost pressure.
Slip inside and the cabin greets you with Alcantara, red stitching and Nismo logos that remind you of its purpose. This is not luxury in the traditional sense, but rather craftsmanship born from racing heritage.
Today, finding a GT-R Nismo in this condition, UK-supplied, carefully maintained, and with an extremely comprehensive service history, is becoming increasingly uncommon. And with production now officially ceased, that rarity will only deepen with time.
So this isn’t just an opportunity to own a car. It’s a chance to own the last note of a legend. The final expression of a machine that defied convention, humbled supercars, and earned the name Godzilla.