Gran Turismo Wiki
Advertisement

The Gran Turismo series features Dealerships, a place where the player can buy cars to use in a race.

In Gran Turismo[]

In the original Gran Turismo, there were only 10 manufacturers (6 from Japan, 2 from the US, 2 from the UK), and the Japanese dealerships, aside from having new cars, also include used cars and special racing models, as well as named tuning shops. The manufacturers shown for the dealerships are as follows:

In this game, unwanted cars are sold through the dealer; selling a car to the right manufacturer grants a 10% bonus to the sale price, for a total of 60%. Later games would move the selling of cars to the My Home/Garage.

In Gran Turismo 2[]

With the addition of more foreign manufacturers, Gran Turismo 2 splits the dealerships per region called "Cities". In addition, some foreign manufacturers now offer special racing models, although used cars are still exclusive to Japanese brands (except Tommy Kaira), although some foreign brands were planned to have used car dealerships in the game's demo versions. The dealerships for each city are as follows:

West City[]

This City covers Italian and French dealerships.

South City[]

This City covers American dealerships.

North City[]

This City covers British and German dealerships.

East City[]

This City covers Japanese dealerships.

In Gran Turismo 3: A-Spec[]

In Gran Turismo 3: A-Spec, the New and Used Car Dealerships have merged into one big dealership only separated by country. This is also to make way for Belgian and Australian cars. The dealerships in this game are as follows:

Japan[]

USA[]

Germany[]

France[]

Italy[]

UK[]

Belgium[]

Australia[]

In Gran Turismo 4[]

In order to make way for more foreign cars, the dealerships had to be individually separated by country. This also marks the debut of tuning shops with fully tuned car models. The dealerships in the game are as follows:

USA[]

UK[]

Netherlands[]

Belgium[]

France[]

Spain[]

Sweden[]

Germany[]

Italy[]

Korea[]

Australia[]

Japan[]

Tuner Village[]

In addition to dealerships, several tuning brands are also grouped into a section of dealership called Tuner Village. The village's primary function is as independent tuning shops for certain cars, which offer original turbo kits and suspension parts.

In Gran Turismo 5[]

Gran Turismo 5 now sorts the dealerships by new (for Premium Cars) or used (for Standard Cars). The Premium dealerships in this game are as follows:

Production Cars[]

Tuning Companies[]

In Gran Turismo 6[]

In Gran Turismo 6, the New, Used and Online Car Dealerships are merged into one big car dealership, now separated by region (Asia-Pacific, North America, Europe). Some cars that are not purchasable in this merged dealership can be found at the Recommended Car Dealership. The dealerships in the game are as follows:

North America[]

Asia-Pacific[]

Europe[]

In Gran Turismo Sport[]

Dealerships in Gran Turismo Sport are part of a feature called Brand Central. In addition to purchasing cars, it is also possible to look at manufacturer's history and videos, and take photo in dedicated scape locations (only cars associated to that brand's location are allowed in; showroom cars can also be borrowed). Contracts for FIA Gran Turismo Manufacturer Series can also be signed. The Brand Central also includes content for non-manufacturer brand partners such as FIA, TAG Heuer, Lewis Hamilton, and Michelin.

See List of Brands section in Brand Central article of a list of available dealers.

In Gran Turismo 7[]

There are now three dealerships in Gran Turismo 7, featuring the return of Brand Central (only available for cars made in 2011 or newer, and also similar in function to GT Sport), Used Car Dealerships (similar to previous games, consisting of cars made prior to 2011, with the lineup changing daily), and a new, third dealership called Legend Car Dealership (similar to the Used Car Dealerships, except that they offer road and race cars that are often considered to be historically important and legendary).

The Used and Legend dealerships now also have brand names, being operated by Auto Plus and Hagerty respectively, the former originally a fictional sponsors that first appeared in Gran Turismo Sport.

Advertisement