Koenigsegg’s Factory test driver Markus Lundh piloted the Jesko Absolut to two new all-out production car top speed records on June 6, 2026, at the brand’s home airfield in Ängelholm, Sweden, the former Swedish Air Force facility where the hypercar maker has operated since 2003. The results were verified by Racelogic using industry-standard VBOX equipment.
Over the quarter-mile, the Absolut recorded 8.54 seconds at 190 mph. Over the half-mile, it ran 12.76 seconds at 232 mph, extending the standing half-mile top speed record of 13.27 seconds at 232 mph and the 0-250-0 mph world record it reclaimed previously, both of which duPont REGISTRY covered in May last year. Both represent the fastest top speeds ever recorded for a production car at those distances, and mark the first time in history a production car has exceeded 300 km/h or 186 mph over the quarter-mile.
For context, the Chevrolet Corvette ZR1X set a quarter-mile elapsed time of 8.67 seconds at 159 mph in January 2026, on a prepped surface with all-wheel drive. The runs were completed on an unprepped surface, on production tires, with power going to the rear wheels only, removing the variables that allow most record attempts to be questioned on grounds of preparation or specification.
What makes this latest run particularly notable is how new software advancements made the records possible, and Koenigsegg is rolling them out via over-the-air update to all Jesko Absolut owners. Every car in the fleet receives the same capability that produced these results without a factory visit.
The Jesko Absolut was introduced at the 2020 Geneva Motor Show with a theoretical top speed claim of 330 mph, the highest stated figure ever announced for a production car. That number remains unverified in a controlled record attempt, but the Ängelholm results demonstrate that the car's real-world performance at speed is not disconnected from its engineering ambitions.
Power comes from a twin-turbocharged 5.0-liter V8 producing 1,600 horsepower on E85, routed through Koenigsegg's proprietary Light Speed Transmission, a nine-speed unit capable of shifting to any gear simultaneously rather than sequentially. Production is limited to 125 units, all of which will now receive this software update.
Images: Koenigsegg