How many Lexus LFAs are there in Australia?
There are about a dozen Lexus LFAs in Australia. As of 2024, enthusiast registries estimate around 12 units are registered in the country, though the official tally isn’t published by Lexus Australia and counts can shift with ownership transfers and imports.
What is the Lexus LFA and why Australia’s count matters
The Lexus LFA is a limited-run, hand-built V10 supercar produced from 2010 to 2012, with 500 units built worldwide. Australia received a small share of these cars, making each remaining example a coveted item for collectors. Since there is no centralized public registry of ownership in Australia, numbers are largely derived from car-enthusiast registries, auction listings, and dealer/import records.
Current tally and how it’s tracked
Public counts are not published by Lexus and can vary as cars move between ownerships, are temporarily held in storage, or are imported/exported. Enthusiast registries compile sightings, VINs, and plate data to approximate how many LFAs are in the country.
Estimates place the Australian LFA count around 12 units as of 2024, representing cars that are registered for road use or held in private collections within Australia.
Distribution across states
LFAs in Australia are concentrated in major population centers, with the majority historically located in New South Wales and Victoria. Smaller numbers have appeared in Queensland, Western Australia, and the Australian Capital Territory.
These patterns reflect where import activity and car-enthusiast networks are strongest, rather than an official state-by-state registry.
- New South Wales: most likely located there, in the hands of collectors or enthusiasts
- Victoria: a significant presence among private collectors and show cars
- Queensland: occasional sightings and registrations
- Western Australia: a few units, primarily in private ownership
- Australian Capital Territory: at least one example or occasional appearance
Because LFAs are rare and move between owners or states, exact numbers by state are not publicly confirmed.
What to watch for if you’re tracking LFAs
For the most current snapshot, enthusiasts monitor public sale listings, import logs, and club registries. Australia’s luxury-car scene remains tight-knit, with sightings often reported on social media and in car-spotting publications.
Summary
The Lexus LFA’s Australian footprint remains extremely small, with roughly a dozen units across the country as of 2024. The number is not fixed and depends on ownership changes, imports, and deregistrations. The absence of an official public registry means counts come from enthusiast sources rather than a government or manufacturer tally.
