Honda Australia has promised new stock of the Civic Type R for later this year, but admits the sought-after hot hatch is becoming a “difficult” model for the brand amid tightening emissions regulations.

Prospective buyers haven’t been able to place an order for a brand-new Civic Type R since last year, with the most recent batch of cars – secured in February – going straight to customers who had previously placed an expression of interest (EOI). This was also the case when order books were previously opened in August 2025.

However, Honda Australia will welcome at least some new orders when the next allotment of vehicles arrives in a matter of months.

“We do have a batch of vehicles arriving in the second half of this year, and certainly when that is confirmed and we’re in a position to, we’ll be opening that up to customers to order,” confirmed Honda Australia director Robert Thorp.

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“We’ve been engaging with a number of customers who have expressed interest and or were unsuccessful in previous allocations, and at the moment those buyers are probably at the top of the list to access the next batch.”

Still, supply is likely to remain limited – as it has almost always been – heading into 2027 and beyond, especially given Type R sales negatively impact on Honda’s emissions equation Down Under.

Under Australia’s New Vehicle Efficiency Standard (NVES), automakers face increasing pressure to reduce fleet-average CO2 emissions, meaning high-emitting performance models like the Civic Type R are harder to justify unless offset by cleaner vehicles elsewhere in the lineup.

In Honda’s case, that means more heavy lifting for its higher-volume hybrids including the CR-V, HR-V, and ZR-V SUVs, as well as the upcoming Super One electric city hatch.