Key Takeaways
- Spec R 6MT is the value leader; Spec S is cheaper
- Rust + crash repairs are the biggest value killers
- Stock/near-stock cars outperform heavily modified builds
- SR20DET parts support is strong; quality varies
- Prices cooled from peak but good cars stay firm
- US legality starts with 1999 cars in 2024
Technical Specifications
Two engines, two trims, three gearboxes. Spec S gets the 165 PS SR20DE with a 5-speed manual or a 4-speed auto. Spec R gets the 250 PS SR20DET with a 6-speed manual or the same 4-speed auto. Both engines are 2.0 liter four cylinders and both run rear wheel drive. The 6-speed is the one you want, and it's the one with the known weakness.
Engine Options
| Engine | Displacement | Power | Boost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SR20DE | 2.0L | 165PS @ 6400rpm | N/A | NA; 160lb-ft(217Nm)@4800rpm |
| SR20DE (Autech) | 2.0L | 200PS @ 7200rpm | N/A | Autech tune; 152lb-ft(206Nm)@6000 |
| SR20DET | 2.0L | 250PS @ 6400rpm | 0.8 bar (11.6 psi) | T28BB; 203lb-ft(275Nm)@4800rpm |
Transmission Options
| Type | Ratios | Availability | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6-speed Manual (FS6R92A) | 3.626/2.200/1.541/1.213/1.000/0.767 | Spec-R, Autech | RWD; close-ratio 6MT |
| 5-speed Manual (FS5W71C) | 3.321/1.902/1.308/1.000/0.759 | Spec-S | RWD 5MT |
| 4-speed Automatic (RE4R01A) | 2.785/1.545/1.000/0.694 | Spec-S, Spec-R, Varietta | RWD 4AT |
Livability
- Headroom
- 36.0"
- Helmet-friendly only with low seat; tall drivers tight
- Rear Seats
- 2+2 (tiny)
- Kids/bags only; adults suffer; hard entry
- Cargo
- 7-9 cu ft
- Trunk ok for groceries; strut brace/spare reduce space
Variants & Trims
S15 trim is mostly Spec S or Spec R. Spec R has the V Package (HICAS, helical LSD, brakes), the Aero kit (front bumper and rear wing), and the Aero V combination. The Autech variants are the rare ones. The Varietta convertible (1,143 units total) only came with the SR20DE and a 4-speed auto. The Style-A (54 units total) is the rarest S15 you can buy.
| Generation | Trim | Engine | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| S15 (JDM) | Spec-S | SR20DE | NA, 5MT/4AT, viscous LSD opt, ABS opt |
| S15 (JDM) | Spec-R | SR20DET | turbo, 6MT/4AT, helical LSD, 4-pot F |
| S15 (JDM) | Spec-R Aero | SR20DET | Aero kit, rear wing, 6MT/4AT, helical LSD |
| S15 (JDM) | Spec-R V Package | SR20DET | HICAS, helical LSD, 6MT/4AT, ABS |
| S15 (JDM) | Spec-R Aero V Package | SR20DET | Aero kit, HICAS, helical LSD, 6MT/4AT |
| S15 (JDM) | Varietta | SR20DE | open-top, 4AT only, body reinf, ABS |
| S15 (JDM) | Autech Version | SR20DE | 200PS tune, 6MT, Autech aero, LSD opt |
Should You Buy a Nissan Silvia S15?
The S15 is a car you buy with your eyes open. The good stuff is really good and the bad stuff is really bad, and most of it comes down to whether the S15 you're looking at was loved or abused.
Why You'll Love It
- High ceiling SR20DET platform Easy 250–350whp with bolt-ons/turbo; huge tuning knowledge base.
- Balanced, lightweight chassis Responsive steering and rotation; ideal for drift and time attack builds.
- Strong enthusiast demand Icon status keeps liquidity high for clean, correctly spec’d cars.
- Spec R desirability 6MT + turbo trim is the market benchmark; best resale and buyer pool.
- Parts availability (mixed) Aftermarket is deep; OEM trim/interior bits can be pricey or scarce.
Why You Might Not
- Rust and prior damage common Sills, rear arches, strut towers; drift impacts and poor repairs are frequent.
- Modified-car risk Wiring, boost control, and tune quality vary; “built” often means unknown.
- SR20DET age-related issues Coil packs, turbo wear, oil leaks, cooling neglect; compression tests matter.
- RHD ownership compromises Insurance, parts sourcing, and daily usability can be harder in LHD markets.
- Spec inflation Spec R/6MT premiums are steep; clones and swapped cars require scrutiny.
Who Should NOT Buy This
- Anyone needing reliable daily transport
- Drivers over 6'2" or long-torso tall
- People who can't wrench or pay a specialist
- Buyers who want stock, unmodified examples
- Anyone on a tight budget for surprise repairs
- People who need real rear seats
- Noise-sensitive drivers (drone, rattles, NVH)
- Owners without access to JDM parts supply
- Those who won't run premium fuel consistently
- Anyone expecting modern crash safety
Common Issues & Solutions
The S15 has a short list of well-known problem areas. The VCT rattle on cold start. The exhaust manifold and turbo gasket on the SR20DET. The oil spray bars in the head. The 6-speed gearbox slipping in 6th gear, which Nissan never recalled. Cold start each S15 yourself and listen for those four things before anything else.
| Issue | Cause | Solution | Est. Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6MT 2nd/3rd synchro grind | Hard shifting, old fluid, worn synchros | Rebuild trans; quality fluid; avoid power shifts | $1500-3500 |
| Turbo seal failure/smoke | High shaft play, oil coking, overspeeding | Rebuild/replace turbo; fix boost control & oiling | $800-2500 |
| SR20DET rod bearing wear | Low oil pressure, track use, poor oiling mods | Bottom-end rebuild; check pump, clearances, pan | $3500-8000 |
| Timing chain rattle | Worn tensioner/guides; neglected oil changes | Replace chain kit; inspect sprockets and cover | $700-1800 |
| Overheating in traffic | Old radiator, weak fans, air pockets, bad cap | New rad, shroud/fans, bleed properly, new cap | $400-1200 |
| Lean knock from bad tune | Mismatch injectors/MAF, boost creep, hacked ECU | Proper ECU/tune on dyno; fix hardware mismatch | $800-2500 |
| Coil pack misfire under boost | Aging coils, wrong plugs/gap, poor grounds | New coils, correct plugs, refresh grounds/harness | $250-900 |
| Cracked exhaust manifold | Heat cycling, cheap tubular manifolds, no support | Replace manifold; add bracing; new studs/gaskets | $400-1500 |
| Power steering rack leaks | Old seals, torn boots, drift angle stress | Rebuild/replace rack; flush system; new boots | $500-1400 |
| Rear subframe bushing slop | Aged rubber; aggressive launches/drifting | Replace bushings; inspect mounts; align after | $600-1800 |
| Rust in sills/quarters | Poor storage, clogged drains, hidden under skirts | Cut/weld repair; treat cavities; repaint blend | $1500-6000 |
| Electrical gremlins from mods | Alarm/boost controller splices, poor grounds | De-hack wiring; repair loom; add relays properly | $300-2000 |
Differences between JDM & USDM
The Silvia S15 was never officially sold in the United States. Nissan judged the projected volume too low to justify federalising the car for FMVSS and EPA compliance, and the S14-era 240SX had already shown weak US sales. Cars built between January 1999 and the end of 2002 only became eligible for US import under the 25-year exemption rule starting in January 2024 (for the earliest 1999 build cars) and run through the end of 2027 (for the final 2002 cars). Australia and New Zealand received a small grey-export run badged as the 200SX, but those cars shipped only with the SR20DET; the JDM SR20DE was held back from those markets due to emission rules. The S15's outlawed-in-America status drove two decades of forum lore — including the 'Silvia Smuggler' case in Mississippi (2015), in which a man who attempted to import an S15 outside the legal channel faced a $250,000 maximum fine and 20-year sentence; he ultimately pleaded guilty and received an $18,000 fine and 36 months' probation. The car is now legal under the 25-year rule and import waitlists in the US remain long for clean Spec-R 6MT examples.
Pre-Purchase Inspection Checklist
Don't skip the cold start. A lot of what's wrong with an S15 shows up in the first 30 seconds before the engine warms up. Bring this list and walk it with the seller, not in front of them. If the seller pushes back on a compression test or a leakdown, walk away.
Critical Priority
- Front frame rails Check for kinks/welds; crash repair signs
- Compression/leakdown Verify even numbers; low cyl = ringland wear
- Oil pressure Hot idle pressure low = worn bearings/pump
- ECU/tune Confirm ECU type; dyno sheet; safe AFR/boost
High Priority
- Strut towers Look for cracking, seam sealer splits, rust
- Rear subframe mounts Check for tearing, rust, ovaled bolt holes
- Rocker panels/sills Inspect pinch welds; bubbling rust under skirts
- SR20DET cold start Listen for chain rattle; unstable idle, smoke
- Turbo condition Check shaft play; boost creep; oil in intercooler
- Boost control Verify boost matches tune; no spikes on pull
- Cooling system Check rad end tanks, fans, overflow, hot spots
- Fuel system Smell for fuel; check lines, filter, pump noise
- MAF & intake Check hacked wiring; poor clamps cause lean
- 6MT synchros 2nd/3rd grind on fast shifts; test when warm
- Suspension arms Check bent arms; seized adjusters; torn bushes
- Wiring hacks Inspect for splices at ECU, coils, fuel pump
Medium Priority
- Underbody rails Check for jack damage; crushed rails hide rust
- Oil leaks Front cover, turbo feed/return, rear main seep
- Ignition coils Misfire under boost; cracked coil packs common
- Clutch & flywheel Chatter/slip; check pedal feel and engagement
- Diff & axles Clunks on takeoff; leaking diff seals; CV boots
- Steering rack Check for leaks, play; torn boots, heavy feel
- Brakes Warped rotors; seized calipers; soft pedal
- ABS light Scan/verify function; hacked wiring is common
- Cluster/odometer Check for swap signs; mileage often unverifiable
- A/C operation Confirm cold air; compressor noise; conversion
Generation History
S15 Silvia (1999-2002)
- SR20DET in Spec R; 6MT option
- Sharper chassis; strong aftermarket
- Spec R aero/HLSD; track/drift favorite
- High theft/abuse rate affects survivors
Market Data
Production Numbers & Rarity
| Generation | Years | Total Built | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| S15 Silvia | 1999-2002 | ~43,000 (estimated) | JDM-only; excludes some Autech/Varietta |
Rarest variant: S15 Autech Version
How It Compares
The S15 plays in the JDM 90s turbo coupe segment with the FD3S RX-7 and the JZA80 Supra. The S15 is the lightest and the cheapest to tune. The FD3S is the most exotic to drive but the most expensive to keep running. The Supra has the most power potential and the heaviest chassis. Pick based on what you want to do with the car.
| Feature | S15 | Mazda RX-7 FD3S | Toyota Supra JZA80 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stock power | S15 Spec R: ~250 PS | FD3S: ~255 PS (JDM) | JZA80: ~280 PS (JDM) |
| Transmission | 6MT (Spec R) / 4AT | 5MT / 4AT | 6MT / 4AT |
| Weight/feel | ~1,240–1,270 kg | ~1,260–1,320 kg | ~1,500+ kg |
| Tuning cost | Moderate; SR parts plentiful | Higher; rotary upkeep/tuning | Higher; 2JZ parts + chassis costs |
| Chassis use-case | Drift/track sweet spot | Grip/track; drift less common | GT power build; heavier feel |
| Market pricing | $25k–$65k (condition/spec) | $35k–$90k+ (condition) | $60k–$150k+ (turbo) |
Comparable Alternatives
If the S15 doesn't end up being your car, the obvious neighbors are the 180SX Type X for a cheaper SR platform with the same drift DNA, the ER34 Skyline for an RB25DET turbo coupe with more GT feel, or the JZX100 Chaser if you want a 1JZ sedan with big power for less money.
Nissan 180SX Type X
Cheaper SR platform; similar drift DNA; more supply
Nissan Skyline ER34
RB25DET turbo coupe; more GT feel; strong parts support
Toyota Chaser JZX100
1JZ turbo sedan; big power value; different body style
Nissan 350Z Z33
LHD-friendly modern option; strong NA V6; track-ready
Mazda RX-7 FD3S
More exotic feel; higher costs; strong upside for clean cars
In Pictures
The Buyer's Read
If you're buying an S15, the safest car is a Spec R 6MT with paperwork. Stock or close to stock, no rust, no crash repair, and ideally a car that was driven on the street rather than the track. That's the version of the S15 the market actually pays for, and it's the one you can sell again later without losing your shirt.
Skip anything that looks too cheap. A $25,000 S15 almost always means rust, drift abuse, a hacked tune, or all three. The cost of fixing those things will take you straight to the price of a clean Spec R, except now you're stuck with a re-shelled car that smart buyers won't touch. The same logic works the other way too. A $65,000 S15 needs to be exceptional, not just clean. Ask for the auction sheet. Ask for compression numbers. Ask why it's priced where it is.
If you want a Varietta or a Style-A, you're buying a collector car, not a driver. The Varietta only came with the SR20DE and a 4-speed auto, so don't expect Spec R thrills. The Style-A is rarer than most people realize, with only 54 cars built and just 11 of those on the Spec R platform. Both Autech cars will appreciate, but you're paying for the rarity, not the driving experience.
The S15 is fun to drive and easy to work on, but it's a 25 year old turbo coupe with a known transmission weakness, a known oiling weakness, and a known coil pack weakness. Budget for a full SR20DET refresh in the first year of ownership. Plan to replace the coil packs, service the spray bars, and check the 6-speed for slippage before you push any power through it. Do that and you'll have a great S15. Skip it and you'll have an expensive lesson.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What S15 trim is most desirable?
- Spec R (SR20DET) with 6MT is the top pick; Spec S is NA and cheaper.
- What are the biggest inspection red flags?
- Rust, frame/rail repairs, mismatched VIN tags, poor welds, and messy wiring from mods.
- How much does mileage matter vs condition?
- Condition wins. Verified low-rust, stock-ish cars beat “low km” examples with drift history.
- Common SR20DET issues to check?
- Look for compression/leakdown, turbo shaft play, oil leaks, coil packs, overheating, and a safe tune.
- Are automatics worth buying?
- They’re cheaper, but resale is weaker. Budget for a proper manual swap only if documentation is solid.
- What mods help value vs hurt value?
- Quality suspension/brakes can be fine. Big turbo, cut harnesses, and unknown ECUs usually hurt value.
- When is the S15 legal to import to the US?
- Under the 25-year rule, 1999 cars became eligible in 2024; 2002 cars in 2027.
- What’s the best spec for long-term collectability?
- Spec R 6MT, original paint/trim, clean history, factory aero, and minimal reversible mods.
Sources & References
- Nissan Silvia — encyclopedic overview — WikipediaVerified
- Nissan SR engine family — including SR20DE and SR20DET — WikipediaVerified
- Autech — Nissan's in-house tuning and special-build division (Varietta, Style-A) — WikipediaVerified
- Nissan 240SX — North American S-chassis counterpart and import context — WikipediaVerified
- NHTSA — Importing a vehicle into the United States — U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety AdministrationVerified
- U.S. Customs and Border Protection — importing a car — U.S. Customs and Border ProtectionVerified
- Bring a Trailer — Nissan Silvia auction archive — Bring a TrailerVerified
- Cars & Bids — Silvia auction archive — Cars & BidsVerified
- NISMO official site — heritage and S-tune/R-tune complete-car programs — NISMOVerified
- IMCDB — Nissan Silvia S15 film and television appearances — Internet Movie Cars DatabaseVerified
Sources last verified: