Far from the bright lights of major auto shows, Toyota has been quietly testing a camouflaged coupe on public roads in Portugal.
Photos published by French outlet Rallye-Sport.fr and captured by photographer Marcio Pereira suggest the Japanese automaker may be preparing something much bigger than just another prototype: a possible return of the legendary Celica name to top-level rally competition.
The timing is not accidental. New World Rally Championship rules scheduled to arrive for the 2027 season are expected to allow a wider variety of body styles, including coupes, opening the door for a model that moves away from the traditional hatchback layout that has defined modern rally cars.
A Prototype That Sparks Familiar Memories

Even under heavy camouflage, the test vehicle shows clear performance intent. Wide fenders, aggressive aero elements, and a low stance point to serious motorsport ambitions. Observers also noted styling cues that resemble Toyota’s FT-Se concept, especially around the front lighting signature, suggesting this could preview a future road-going sports coupe as well as a rally machine.
Toyota has not officially confirmed the model’s identity, but the clues align with long-running speculation that the company wants to revive the Celica. That idea gained momentum when company executives publicly hinted at the name’s return during rally events in Japan, reinforcing the brand’s desire to reconnect with its motorsport heritage.
Why The Timing Makes Sense For Toyota
The rule changes coming to the WRC are designed to make the championship more flexible and more attractive to manufacturers. Current Rally1 cars are set to be phased out, with a new generation of regulations targeting lower costs and broader design freedom.
For Toyota, this creates the perfect window. The brand already dominates modern rallying with the GR Yaris Rally1, but a new technical cycle allows engineers to rethink both performance and brand identity. A coupe-based rally car would stand out immediately in a field traditionally filled with compact hatchbacks.
Historically, the Celica is deeply tied to rally success. During the 1990s, Toyota captured multiple manufacturer titles with the Celica GT Four, cementing the model’s legacy among enthusiasts. Bringing the name back would give Toyota a strong emotional connection with longtime fans while helping market a new generation of performance vehicles.
Design Direction And Technical Expectations
Although technical details remain unconfirmed, the prototype’s silhouette suggests a modern performance coupe rather than a reworked hatchback. The wider body and low roofline indicate aerodynamic efficiency and stability at high speeds, both essential for rally competition.
Under upcoming WRC rules, the focus will shift toward cost-controlled performance and adaptable platforms. Industry observers expect powertrains to balance efficiency and durability while still delivering strong output. That could allow Toyota to align its rally program more closely with a future production sports model, a strategy the company has used effectively in the past.
The End Of One Era, The Start Of Another

Toyota has already acknowledged that the current GR Yaris Rally1 program will eventually give way to a new generation of competition cars built around the next technical rule set. With testing now visible on public roads, development appears well underway.
If the new car does indeed carry the Celica badge, it would mark more than the return of a nameplate. It would signal Toyota’s effort to bridge historic rally success with the next era of performance engineering. For American readers, many of whom remember the turbocharged Celica GT Four as one of the great Japanese performance icons of the 1990s, such a comeback would instantly revive one of the most recognizable rally names ever sold in the U.S.
For now, Toyota remains officially silent. But the combination of new regulations, visible testing activity, and the brand’s repeated hints suggests that a major announcement may only be a matter of time.
And if the camouflage hides what many believe it does, the World Rally Championship could soon welcome back one of its most famous names.
This article originally appeared on Autorepublika.com and has been republished with permission by Guessing Headlights. AI-assisted translation was used, followed by human editing and review.
