WedsSport TC105X SBC 18x9.5 +39 – The Civic Type R Wheel Upgrade That Turns Heads
When you bought your Honda Civic Type R, you didn’t just buy a car—you bought an experience. Whether it’s the FK8 or the new FL5, the Type R is alr...
Your cart is empty
Continue shoppingProduct added to cart
When you bought your Honda Civic Type R, you didn’t just buy a car—you bought an experience. Whether it’s the FK8 or the new FL5, the Type R is alr...
2026 TOKYO AUTO SALON LIMITED EDITION HKS FL5 CIVIC TYPE R STEERING WHEELS FOR THIS YEARS TOKYO AUTO SALON, HKS RELEASED A FEW GOODIES. AND A...
HKS is taking the world's fastest FWD car to new heights with their new type s aero body kit parts. Taking on the function and form approach, th...
HKS Exhaust Comparison: Hi-Power, Hi-Power SPEC-L, Super Turbo Muffler, and Legamax Premium If you're cross-shopping HKS exhausts, you've probably ...
The 2023+ Honda Civic Type R (chassis code FL5) is the most powerful Honda production car ever sold in the United States. Its K20C1 2.0-liter turbocharged inline-four produces 315 horsepower and 310 lb-ft of torque from the factory, driving the front wheels through a 6-speed manual transmission and a helical limited-slip differential — there is no automatic option, and that's by design. The FL5 set a front-wheel-drive lap record at Suzuka and remains one of the last truly analog performance cars: turbocharged, manual-only, and engineered for the track straight off the showroom floor.
What makes the FL5 special for modifiers is how much headroom the factory K20C1 has. The platform responds to tuning aggressively — a Hondata FlashPro with an off-the-shelf Stage 1 map adds roughly 55 wheel horsepower on 93 octane with basic bolt-ons, and built examples running larger turbos and E85 have made 500-600+ wheel horsepower on the stock engine internals. But the honest truth about the FL5 is that its real limitation isn't power — it's heat. The factory intercooler heat-soaks quickly under repeated hard pulls or track use, pulling timing and reducing power. That's why the smartest FL5 builds prioritize cooling before chasing peak numbers.
Kami Speed carries the full FL5 modification catalog: Hondata FlashPro and tuning, PRL and Eventuri intakes, front-mount intercooler upgrades, downpipes and turbo-back exhausts, big brake kits and pads for track duty, coilovers and chassis bracing, lightweight wheels in proper FL5 fitment, and aero. Whether you're building a daily-driven Type R, a dedicated track weapon, or a 500-horsepower street car, the FL5 is one of the best platforms on the market — and we'll help you build it in the right order.
The honest answer for the FL5 is different from most cars: your first mod should be an intercooler upgrade, not a tune — if you do any repeated hard driving or track days. The FL5's biggest limitation isn't power, it's heat. The factory intercooler heat-soaks quickly under repeated pulls, which causes the ECU to pull timing and reduce power right when you want it most. A larger front-mount intercooler keeps intake air temperatures consistent so the car makes the same power on pull three as it did on pull one. That said, if you're primarily a street driver who wants more power for spirited daily driving, a Hondata FlashPro with a Stage 1 tune is the highest power-per-dollar mod — roughly +55 wheel horsepower on 93 octane. Honest recommendation: if you track the car or do canyon runs, intercooler first. If you're a street driver who just wants more power, FlashPro first. Most FL5 owners end up doing both early, but the order depends on how you drive.
The FL5 is tuned using Hondata FlashPro — the dominant tuning platform for modern Honda performance cars. Unlike Subaru (COBB Accessport) or many European cars, the FL5's ECU is tuned by Hondata's hardware/software system, which connects to your car's OBD port and flashes calibration maps to the factory ECU. Hondata offers off-the-shelf (OTS) maps for common setups, or you can get a custom tune from an FL5-experienced tuner using FlashPro's datalogging. A Stage 1 OTS map on 93 octane with basic bolt-ons (intake, downpipe, exhaust) adds around 55 wheel horsepower. The FlashPro also lets you switch between maps (91 octane, 93 octane, E85), datalog for diagnostics, and return the car to stock for dealer visits. Note: the FL5 ECU requires unlocking before it can be tuned, which Hondata's process handles. This is the foundation mod that lets every other bolt-on actually make power — installing an intake or exhaust without tuning leaves most of the gains on the table.
This is the defining characteristic of the FL5 platform, and understanding it is the key to building one correctly. The factory intercooler is undersized for sustained hard use. Under repeated hard pulls — track sessions, back-to-back canyon runs, drag passes — intake air temperatures (IAT) climb rapidly. When IAT rises, the K20C1's ECU pulls ignition timing to protect the engine from knock, which directly reduces power. You feel this as the car getting noticeably slower after a few hard pulls, then recovering after it cools down. The fix, in priority order: (1) a larger front-mount intercooler — the single most effective heat-soak fix, keeps IAT stable; (2) upgraded charge piping for better airflow; (3) for track cars, an oil cooler and upgraded radiator to manage overall heat; (4) E85 or ethanol blends, which run cooler and resist knock better than pump gas. Many FL5 owners chase peak dyno numbers before addressing cooling, then wonder why the car feels inconsistent. Cooling first is the enthusiast-correct path for any FL5 that sees hard use.
Federal law (the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act) prevents Honda from voiding your entire warranty simply because you installed aftermarket parts. However, Honda can deny warranty on a specific component if they can demonstrate an aftermarket part caused the failure. In practice: bolt-on intakes, exhausts, and intercoolers carry relatively low warranty risk and are rarely contested for unrelated repairs. ECU tuning with Hondata FlashPro is where it gets sensitive — the FL5's ECU must be unlocked to tune, and Honda dealers can detect a tuned or previously-tuned ECU. Powertrain failures on a tuned FL5 are routinely denied warranty coverage. FlashPro lets you return the ECU to stock before dealer visits, which is what most owners do, though the unlock itself may leave traces. Honest advice: if your FL5 is under powertrain warranty and you're risk-averse, stick to bolt-ons that don't require tuning. If you're comfortable with the risk or past warranty, the FL5's tuning headroom is one of its best features. We're happy to discuss your specific situation.
The factory K20C1 in the FL5 has remarkable headroom. Stock internals have reliably supported 500-600+ wheel horsepower in built examples running larger turbochargers and E85 fuel. For context: factory output is 315 crank horsepower (roughly 280-290 at the wheels); a Stage 1 tune brings that to around 320-340 wheel horsepower; bolt-ons plus a bigger turbo and E85 can push past 500 wheel horsepower while keeping the engine internally stock. The known limitation at very high power is valve float around 7,300 RPM, made worse by higher boost — serious high-horsepower builds address valvetrain at that point. But for the vast majority of FL5 owners, the stock engine will handle everything they'd want to do on a street car. The realistic, reliable street/track sweet spot is a Stage 1-2 tune with supporting mods (intercooler, intake, exhaust, downpipe) making 340-380 wheel horsepower — strong, repeatable, and easy on the drivetrain. Going beyond that into big-turbo territory is where costs escalate and reliability requires more careful planning.
The 2023+ FL5 and the 2017-2021 FK8 share the same K20C1 2.0-liter turbocharged engine, but they are different cars and most parts do NOT cross over. Engine: both use the K20C1, but the FL5 makes 315 hp vs the FK8's 306 hp, and the FL5's factory turbocharger uses an 8-blade billet compressor wheel with extended-tip technology versus the FK8's cast 6+6 split wheel — the FL5 turbo is more efficient. Chassis: the FL5 is built on the newer 11th-gen Civic platform with improved rigidity, revised suspension geometry, and a longer wheelbase. Important for mod planning: while the engines are closely related (and some turbo upgrades like PRL's drop-in units can fit both), the chassis, cooling package, intercooler, exhaust routing, and body parts are FL5-specific. Tuning also differs — confirm your tuning platform supports the FL5 specifically. Don't assume FK8 parts will fit your FL5. Always verify chassis-specific fitment (FK8 vs FL5) before ordering hard parts. When in doubt, we can confirm fitment for your specific car.
The FL5 comes from the factory with 19x9.5 +60 wheels and 265/30/19 tires — already an aggressive setup. For aftermarket wheels, the FL5 runs a 5x120 bolt pattern (note: this is different from many other Hondas, which use 5x114.3 — don't assume). The community-validated fitments are 18x9.5 to 19x10.5 in offsets from +35 to +45, depending on whether you want a flush or aggressive look and whether you're running the factory or modified suspension. Many FL5 owners drop to 18-inch wheels for track use to fit more tire sidewall and a wider selection of 200-treadwear track tires — an 18x9.5 +45 with a 265/35/18 is a popular track setup. For street, staying 19-inch keeps the OEM look with lighter aftermarket wheels reducing unsprung weight. Critical note: the FL5's 5x120 bolt pattern and the brake caliper clearance (the Brembo front brakes are large) limit your wheel options more than most cars — always verify the wheel clears the FL5's Brembos and matches the 5x120 PCD before ordering. We can help confirm fitment.
The FL5 comes with genuinely good factory brakes — Brembo four-piston front calipers with two-piece rotors, far better than most cars get from the factory. For street driving and occasional spirited use, they're excellent and need nothing. For dedicated track use, the upgrade priority is the same as most performance cars but starts later because the baseline is so strong: (1) high-temperature brake fluid (Motul RBF600 or similar) — the factory fluid boils under sustained track abuse and this is the cheapest, most effective first step; (2) track-compound brake pads — the factory pads are tuned for street comfort and fade under repeated hard braking; (3) stainless steel brake lines for firmer pedal feel at temperature; (4) brake cooling ducts for serious track work. A full big brake kit is rarely necessary on the FL5 because the factory Brembos are already strong — most track-day FL5 owners get everything they need from fluid, pads, and lines. Save the big brake kit money for cooling and tuning unless you're doing dedicated wheel-to-wheel racing.
Please wait...
