Top 10 Sports Cars 2010 — Best Overall + Best Value
Top 10 Sports Cars 2010 — Best Overall + Best Value
*Published June 15, 2026 | Updated June 15, 2026*
The 2010 model year was a high-water mark for the affordable-to-attainable sports car. It was the year the retro Chevrolet Camaro returned to dealer lots after an eight-year absence, the year the Nissan GT-R R35 era hit its stride as a sub-$100k supercar killer, and the last great hurrah of the naturally aspirated, manual-transmission coupe before turbocharging and downsizing swept the segment.
Looking back from 2026, this was a class loaded with future modern classics. Here is how the ten best stacked up, in period dollars and with an eye on where their values sit today.
Direct Answer
The Best Overall sports car of 2010 was the Porsche 911 Carrera S (997.2) at a 2010 MSRP of $87,800 — the rare car that delivered supercar pace, everyday usability, and the most rewarding chassis in its price class. The Best Value pick of 2010 was the Mazda MX-5 Miata at a 2010 MSRP of $22,810 — pound-for-pound the most fun per dollar anyone could buy, then or now.
Between those two poles sat one of the deepest sports-car fields of the modern era, from the 638-hp Corvette ZR1 to the giant-slaying Nissan GT-R.
How We Ranked the Top 10
We weighted the field the way an enthusiast actually lived with these cars, then layered in how they have aged. Sources include period road tests from Car and Driver and MotorTrend, plus Edmunds and MotorWeek instrumented numbers, current valuations from Hagerty and Bring a Trailer auction results, and factory specs cross-checked against Wikipedia model pages.
- Driving fun and handling — 30%: steering feel, balance, the grin factor on a back road.
- Performance — 20%: horsepower, 0-60 mph, real-world pace.
- Value in period — 15%: what you got for the 2010 sticker.
- Reliability — 15%: how well it held together as a daily or weekend toy.
- Legacy — 10%: what the car meant to the segment and the brand.
- Collectibility now — 10%: how it has held or grown its value into 2026.
1. Porsche 911 Carrera S (997.2) 🏆 BEST OVERALL
2010 MSRP: $87,800 | Best for: the buyer who wanted one car to do everything brilliantly
The facelifted 997.2 introduced direct-injected 3.8-liter flat-six power rated at 385 hp, paired with either a slick six-speed manual or the new PDK dual-clutch gearbox. Carrera S coupes hit 0-60 mph in about 4.3 seconds with PDK, sent power to the rear wheels, and were known for a steering-and-chassis combination that no rival of the era could match.
It was fast enough to embarrass exotics yet civil enough to commute in daily. Clean manual 997.2 Carrera S coupes have firmed up nicely on Bring a Trailer, with the best examples now trading in the high-$50,000s to mid-$60,000s.
Pros:
- Best-in-class steering feel and chassis balance
- Genuinely usable as a daily driver
- PDK and manual both excellent
- Strong, appreciating collector demand for clean manuals
Cons:
- Highest entry price of the attainable group
- IMS worries linger in the public mind even though the 997.2 moved past them
Verdict: The 2010 911 Carrera S did everything well and most things best — the clear Best Overall.
2. Nissan GT-R (R35)
2010 MSRP: $80,790 | Best for: the buyer chasing supercar pace at half the supercar price
The 2010 GT-R was the car that rewrote the value-per-second equation. Its hand-built 3.8-liter twin-turbo V6 made 485 hp, fed all four wheels through a dual-clutch transaxle and the ATTESA all-wheel-drive system, and launched to 60 mph in roughly 3.3 seconds. Period testers were stunned that an $80k Nissan could run with cars costing twice as much.
It was known as "Godzilla" for good reason. Values bottomed years ago and clean 2010 cars now sit in the high-$50,000s to low-$70,000s, with collector interest climbing as the analog supercar fades.
Pros:
- Supercar acceleration for sports-car money
- All-weather all-wheel-drive traction
- Launch control that humbled exotics
- Hand-assembled engine and real motorsport pedigree
Cons:
- Transmission service and tire bills are eye-watering
- Heavy and clinical rather than delicate
Verdict: The giant-killer of its day and still one of the great performance bargains.
3. Chevrolet Corvette ZR1
2010 MSRP: $106,880 | Best for: the buyer who wanted American supercar firepower
The C6 ZR1 was Chevrolet's no-excuses flagship, built around a supercharged 6.2-liter LS9 V8 making a colossal 638 hp. Rear-wheel drive and a six-speed manual sent it to 60 mph in about 3.4 seconds and onward to a 205-mph top speed, with carbon-ceramic brakes and a carbon-fiber roof to back up the numbers.
It was known as the Corvette that finally matched the world's best on a racetrack. As the last of the supercharged C6 halo cars, ZR1 values have held strong, with good examples trading in the $60,000s to $80,000s on Hagerty and at auction.
Pros:
- 638 hp for roughly half a European exotic's price
- Carbon-ceramic brakes and serious track hardware
- Genuine 200-plus-mph capability
- Holding value as a halo-car collectible
Cons:
- Interior trailed its price tag
- Rawer and less refined than its overseas rivals
Verdict: The most car-for-the-dollar at the supercar end of 2010.
4. Audi R8 4.2 (V8)
2010 MSRP: $114,200 | Best for: the buyer who wanted everyday-usable mid-engine exotic looks
The R8 proved a mid-engine exotic could be livable. The 4.2 used a 4.2-liter V8 good for 420 hp, driving all four wheels via quattro and a gated six-speed manual, with 0-60 mph in about 4.4 seconds. It was known for its open-gate manual, its supercar styling, and a ride and visibility that made it shockingly easy to use daily.
The gated-manual V8 R8 has become a genuine collector darling on Bring a Trailer, with clean examples regularly topping their original sticker as the analog supercar disappears.
Pros:
- Exotic mid-engine looks and presence
- All-weather quattro traction
- The legendary open-gate manual shifter
- Now appreciating, sometimes over original MSRP
Cons:
- V8 trailed the V10 on outright drama
- Servicing carries Audi-exotic costs
Verdict: The usable everyday exotic, and one of the best long-term bets here.
5. BMW M3 (E92)
2010 MSRP: $56,500 | Best for: the buyer who wanted a free-revving V8 they could drive every day
The E92 M3 remains the only M3 to use a naturally aspirated V8, a screaming 4.0-liter unit making 414 hp at a stratospheric 8,300-rpm redline. Rear-wheel drive paired with a six-speed manual or the seven-speed M-DCT got it to 60 mph in roughly 4.5 seconds. It was known for the sound of that V8 and a do-it-all coupe character that defined the breed.
As the last V8 M3, the E92 has become a sought-after modern classic, with clean low-mile manuals climbing into the $40,000s and beyond.
Pros:
- The only naturally aspirated V8 M3 ever built
- 8,300-rpm redline and an unforgettable soundtrack
- Four-season usability with real back seats
- Rising values as the last V8 M3
Cons:
- Rod bearings and throttle actuators are known weak points
- Thirsty for a daily
Verdict: A future blue-chip classic that was already a brilliant all-rounder in 2010.
6. Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport
2010 MSRP: $55,720 | Best for: the buyer who wanted Z06 looks and handling without the price
New for 2010, the Grand Sport married the wide Z06 body and chassis to the base 6.2-liter LS3 V8 making 430 hp, available with a six-speed manual and rear-wheel drive. It reached 60 mph in about 3.9 seconds and was known as the sweet spot of the C6 range — most of the Z06 experience for far less money.
Values have held up well, with clean manual coupes trading in the $30,000s to $40,000s and the better convertibles a step above.
Pros:
- Z06 chassis and wide-body looks at a friendlier price
- Naturally aspirated LS3 character
- Strong real-world pace
- The connoisseur's C6 pick
Cons:
- Interior plastics felt cheap for the segment
- Not as raw or special as a true Z06
Verdict: The smart-money C6 and a fantastic handling bargain.
7. Porsche Cayman S
2010 MSRP: $60,300 | Best for: the purist who valued balance over outright power
Many enthusiasts argued the mid-engine Cayman S was the best-handling car Porsche made in 2010. Its 3.4-liter flat-six produced 320 hp, driving the rear wheels through a manual or PDK, with 0-60 mph in roughly 4.7 seconds. It was known for a near-perfect mid-engine balance that some testers preferred to the 911 itself.
The 987.2 Cayman S has become a quiet collector favorite, with clean examples settling into the $30,000s to low-$40,000s.
Pros:
- Arguably the best chassis balance Porsche sold that year
- Mid-engine poise and gorgeous steering
- Direct-injected flat-six refinement
- Quietly appreciating
Cons:
- Deliberately positioned below the 911 on power
- Tight cabin and modest cargo room
Verdict: The purist's choice and a handling masterclass for the money.
8. Chevrolet Camaro SS
2010 MSRP: $30,995 | Best for: the buyer who wanted big V8 muscle and retro style on a budget
The 2010 Camaro SS marked the nameplate's headline return, and it came swinging with a 6.2-liter LS3 V8 making 426 hp with the manual (or 400 hp via the L99 automatic). Rear-wheel drive and a six-speed manual delivered 0-60 mph in about 4.9 seconds. It was known for bringing genuine muscle-car theater back at a remarkably low price.
Most are still affordable used buys, though clean low-mileage manual SS coupes are starting to draw collector eyes on Hagerty.
Pros:
- 426 hp for about $31,000 new
- Bold retro styling that brought the nameplate back
- Strong aftermarket and parts support
- Still attainable on the used market
Cons:
- Heavy, with poor outward visibility
- Interior materials were budget-grade
Verdict: The car that brought the muscle wars back, and a lot of grunt for the money.
9. Lotus Elise SC
2010 MSRP: $47,250 | Best for: the track-day diehard chasing pure, lightweight thrills
Nothing in 2010 felt as raw and connected as the featherweight Elise. The supercharged SC used a 1.8-liter four good for 218 hp, but with a curb weight near 2,000 pounds it hit 60 mph in about 4.4 seconds and changed direction like nothing else, sending power to the rear wheels through a manual.
It was known for delivering pure, unfiltered driver feedback at the expense of every comfort. As one of the last federalized Lotus models before the brand left the U.S., clean Elises have become genuinely collectible, often trading in the $40,000s to $50,000s.
Pros:
- Sub-2,100-pound weight and telepathic steering
- Unmatched feedback and track focus
- Surprising pace from a small engine
- Rising as a final-era U.S. Lotus
Cons:
- Brutal to live with daily — hard to enter, loud, sparse
- Minimal storage and creature comforts
Verdict: The purest driving experience of 2010 if you can tolerate the compromises.
10. Mazda MX-5 Miata 💎 BEST VALUE
2010 MSRP: $22,810 | Best for: the buyer who wanted maximum smiles per dollar
The NC Miata proved the formula never gets old. Its 2.0-liter four made 167 hp, and while 0-60 mph took around 6.8 seconds, the magic was never about the numbers — it was the rear-wheel-drive balance, the perfect six-speed manual, and the drop top. It was known, then as now, as the answer to "what's the most fun you can have for the money." Affordable, reliable, and cheap to run, clean NC Miatas remain one of the best entry points into sports-car ownership, with values holding steady in the teens to low-$20,000s.
Pros:
- The most fun per dollar of any car here
- Legendary reliability and cheap running costs
- Perfect short-throw manual and ideal balance
- A convertible anyone could afford
Cons:
- Slowest car on this list in a straight line
- Snug for taller drivers
Verdict: The clear Best Value of 2010 — joy that never depended on horsepower.
Buyer Decision Tree — Which One Was Right for You?
What to Look For in a 2010 Sports Car (Then and as a Used/Collector Buy Now)
- Maintenance history above all: a fully documented service record matters more than low mileage on any of these cars. Demand receipts.
- Check for modifications: tasteful, reversible mods are fine, but tuned engines, lowered suspensions, and aftermarket turbo kits can hide abuse. Original cars command the strongest collector premiums.
- GT-R transmission health: the R35's dual-clutch transaxle is robust but costly to service, and abusive launch-control use accelerates wear — verify the gearbox has been maintained and listen for clunks.
- Porsche and BMW weak points: confirm the 997.2 has clean records, and check E92 M3 rod-bearing and throttle-actuator service history specifically.
- Corvette and Camaro basics: look for accident repairs on fiberglass body panels and confirm the LS-series V8 runs cool and clean.
- Matters less than nostalgia implies: absolute originality on a high-mileage driver. A well-sorted, lightly modified car you actually enjoy is often a smarter buy than a museum piece you are afraid to use — many of these were built to be driven, and the driving is the whole point.
FAQ
What was the best overall sports car of 2010? The Porsche 911 Carrera S (997.2) earns it for combining supercar pace, daily usability, and the best chassis in its price class at a 2010 MSRP of $87,800.
What was the best value sports car of 2010? The Mazda MX-5 Miata at $22,810, which delivered more driving joy per dollar than anything else on the market, with bulletproof reliability to match.
Was the 2010 Nissan GT-R really a supercar bargain? Yes. With 485 hp, all-wheel drive, and 0-60 mph in about 3.3 seconds for $80,790, it ran with exotics costing twice as much and earned its "Godzilla" nickname.
Which 2010 sports cars are appreciating in value now? Manual Porsche 911 Carrera S coupes, gated-manual Audi R8 V8s, the last-of-line V8 BMW M3 (E92), the Corvette ZR1, and clean Lotus Elise SC models have all firmed up or climbed into 2026.
Did the Camaro really return in 2010? Yes. The 2010 Camaro SS marked the nameplate's headline comeback after an eight-year absence, packing a 426-hp 6.2-liter LS3 V8 for a starting price of $30,995.
Is the 2010 BMW M3 special among M3s? Very. The E92 is the only M3 ever built with a naturally aspirated V8 — a 4.0-liter screamer that revved to 8,300 rpm — which is why it is now a sought-after modern classic.
Bottom Line
2010 was a golden year for the attainable sports car, and the depth of the field still impresses from 2026. The Porsche 911 Carrera S took Best Overall for being the most complete car money could buy, while the Mazda MX-5 Miata took Best Value for proving that fun was never about horsepower.
In between sat a supercar-slaying GT-R, a 638-hp Corvette ZR1, the last V8 M3, and a returning Camaro that reignited the muscle wars. Nearly every car on this list has since become a modern classic — proof that 2010 was one of the great vintages for drivers.
Sources
- Car and Driver — 2010 model-year road tests and instrumented performance data (caranddriver.com)
- MotorTrend — 2010 sports car comparison tests and 0-60 figures (motortrend.com)
- Edmunds — 2010 Corvette, GT-R, M3, Miata, and R8 specs and track-tested numbers (edmunds.com)
- MotorWeek — 2010 Ford Shelby GT500 and Nissan 370Z road tests (motorweek.org)
- Hagerty Valuation Tools — current values for the 2010 Corvette, Camaro, M3, and R8 (hagerty.com)
- Bring a Trailer — recent auction results for 2010 911, R8, M3, and Elise (bringatrailer.com)
- Kelley Blue Book — 2010 MSRP and specification listings (kbb.com)
- Wikipedia — Chevrolet Corvette (C6), Nissan GT-R, Porsche 911 (997), and BMW M3 (E92) model pages (en.wikipedia.org)
- Autoblog and Jalopnik — 2010 Camaro pricing announcements (autoblog.com, jalopnik.com)
- Motor Authority — 2010 Audi R8 U.S. Pricing (motorauthority.com)
*Sports car review — 2010 sports car reviews, rating, best sports car 2010, and a retrospective review of the top modern-classic sports car picks for buyers.*