Mitsubishi has confirmed it will offer just one manual version of its updated 2026 model year Triton – down from three – making it one of only two mid-size utes on sale in Australia with three pedals, alongside the Toyota HiLux.

The top-selling Ford Ranger dropped the option of a manual transmission entirely when the current generation was introduced in 2022, ending a run of cog-swappers dating back to Lew Bandt’s famous Model 40 Coupe Utility, which pioneered Australia’s ute genre in 1934.

While Ford’s global boss Jim Farley told CarExpert last month the manual version of its iconic Mustang sports car would have to be extracted from the automaker’s “cold, dead hands”, manual dual-cab 4×4 utes have proven to be not-so-sacred.

The Isuzu D-Max – the third-best selling ute in Australia last year behind the Ranger and HiLux – also dropped manual options in 2025.

CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal.

Fourth on Australia’s crowded ute sales ladder was the Mitsubishi Triton, which has since reduced its manual offering.

For its MY26 update due in local showrooms next month, however, Mitsubishi has retained a single three-pedal model variant: the Triton GLX 4×4 dual-cab/chassis, priced at $47,490 before on-road costs.

“The move to reducing number of manual models is following the market, particularly in fleets, where many now demand automatics only,” a spokesperson from Mitsubishi Australia told CarExpert.

“There has remained some demand (around 11 per cent) for GLX Dual Cab Chassis 4×4 in manual transmission, geared for the smaller fleet/private buyer types.”