A 2002 Acura NSX-T, finished in Silverstone Metallic over black leather and showing just 5,136 miles, is now live on duPont REGISTRY Live, marking the platform's first listing of Honda and Acura's groundbreaking supercar. NSX stands for ‘New Sports eXperimental,’ a name that captures exactly what Honda set out to build: a genuinely usable, everyday supercar rather than a temperamental exotic. Bidding currently sits at $180,000, and the auction has already drawn 536 views and 19 watchers, a strong early signal for a car that occupies a unique position in automotive history.
This particular example is part of the first-generation NSX run, which spanned from 1990 until production ended in 2005, with roughly 18,000 units produced worldwide. The car's exterior was designed by Ken Okuyama, working through Pininfarina, the same designer who would later pen the Ferrari Enzo, while Honda Chief Engineer Shigeru Uehara led the engineering program underneath it. The NSX's significance goes well beyond its specifications. When Honda introduced the car in 1990, it set out to prove that a mid-engine supercar could be engineered with the reliability of an everyday Honda, a proposition that seemed almost contradictory to the European exotics it was built to challenge.
Central to that achievement was the involvement of late three-time Formula One world-champion Ayrton Senna, who was driving for McLaren Honda in the late 1980s and early ‘90s. Senna tested an early prototype at Suzuka in 1989 and gave Honda's engineers his impressions of the car's chassis. Honda's engineers spent the following months refining the aluminum monocoque before the car reached production, a process widely tied to the handling balance the NSX became known for.
The 2002 example seen here represents the facelifted, fixed-headlight version of the NSX, introduced that year in place of the original pop-up units that had defined the supercar since 1990. By 2002, annual production had fallen sharply from the model's early years, when Honda built more than 3,000 units in 1991 alone. For the 2002 model year, Acura produced 246 NSX-Ts for the North American market, with no fixed-roof coupes ordered. Among these, only 39 units were finished in Silverstone Metallic with a black interior, based on official Honda build records.
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That steep drop in volume means clean, well-preserved facelift cars like this one are considerably scarcer than the earliest examples, and they tend to command a premium in today's collector market. The mid-mounted 3.2-liter DOHC 24-valve VTEC V6 grew from the original 3.0-liter unit, specifically to extract more performance from Honda's high-revving, naturally aspirated formula, paired exclusively with a 6-speed manual transaxle in this configuration.
Output is rated at 290 horsepower and 224 pound-feet of torque, paired exclusively with a 6-speed manual transaxle in this configuration. Period road tests recorded 0-60 mph in the 5.0 to 5.8 second range and a quarter mile in the low 13-second bracket, while the 2002 facelift's revised aerodynamics raised top speed from 168 mph on earlier cars to 175 mph.
Several details on this specific car reflect the NSX-T's design at its most resolved. The integrated rear lip spoiler, body-color removable targa roof panel, NSX-branded gold brake calipers, and 17-inch forged wheels are all consistent with the model's late-production specification, while the cabin's Bose sound system, automatic climate control, and stainless-steel sill plates underline the NSX's original mission as a genuinely usable daily exotic.
With just 5,136 original miles, this two-owner example sits firmly in the upper tier of NSX-T condition and presentation. The car is accompanied by two keys and a factory car cover in its NSX-branded storage bag, completing a package aimed squarely at collectors. With 97 bids logged and bidding set to end in two days, this NSX-T is shaping up to be a meaningful data point for where clean, low-mileage examples of Honda's first supercar currently sit in the market. Click the link below to view the full listing, condition report, and bidding details on duPont REGISTRY Live.