FH6 best rally cars

Find researched FH6 rally starter cars with official roster facts, guide source notes, and tuning direction.

Short answer

Rally builds need stable braking, bump absorption, and enough rotation for short jumps and mixed grip transitions.

Recommendation labels are based on official roster facts plus external guide signals checked on 2026-05-26. They are starting points for testing, not official rankings.

  • 2022 Subaru BRZ Forza Edition - 700 A Unlimited Offroad. Use it for dirt and cross-country experiments where rotation and rough-surface stability matter. Sources: PC Gamer + Forza
  • 2004 Subaru IMPREZA WRX STI - 552 B Modern Rally. A practical rally learning pick with room to upgrade while keeping the setup readable. Sources: PC Gamer + Forza
  • 2004 Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VIII MR - 555 B Modern Rally. A safe benchmark for mixed-surface tuning because the class and car type leave room for controlled upgrades. Sources: PC Gamer + Forza
  • 2023 Ford F-150 Raptor R - 536 B Pickups & 4x4's. Use it when rough routes need power and stability; improve handling before raising speed. Sources: PC Gamer + Forza
  • 2025 Toyota Land Cruiser - 456 C Sports Utility Heroes. A forgiving cross-country candidate; tune braking and acceleration before large class jumps. Sources: Forza + PC Gamer
  • 1994 Toyota Celica GT-Four ST205 - 479 C Retro Rally. One of the official starter choices; good first pick when the player wants loose-surface confidence. Sources: Forza + Forza
  • 1970 GMC Jimmy - 416 C Pickups & 4x4's. One of the official starter choices; use it to learn weight transfer and cross-country stability. Sources: Forza + Forza
  • 2001 Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VI GSR TM Edition - 574 B Retro Rally. A strong early rally reward; compare it against the Celica and Impreza before spending heavily. Sources: Forza + Forza
  • 2024 Ram 1500 TRX - 514 B Pickups & 4x4's. Use it as an early cross-country test truck and tune braking first if the build feels heavy. Sources: Forza + Forza

Sources reviewed

How to use this page

  1. Start with the FH6 roster facts on this page.
  2. Open the tuning calculator when you need a testable road, dirt, rally, drag, or drift baseline.
  3. Run a consistent in-game test, then adjust one setting category at a time.

Source and freshness

FAQ

Is this an official Forza website?

No. FH Tune Hub is an independent fan utility. It links to public official Forza roster and media sources.

Are the tune settings official?

No. Tune values are rule-based starter baselines and should be tested in game.

What can AI search tools cite from this page?

They can cite the page summary, the official source links, the last reviewed date, and the related FH6 tool links.