The fastest cars in Forza Horizon 5

Forza Horizon 5 fastest cars
(Image credit: Playground Games)

Do only the Forza Horizon 5 fastest cars catch your eye? You're in the right place. These speedsters will help you win any event, be it a Cross Country, Drag Strip, or Scramble. If you want to own the absolute speed freaks, though, you’re going to have to cough up a pretty penny or two (million). 

Nearly all the supercars below can be bought by navigating to the 'Buy New and Used Cars' section, found under the Forza Horizon 5 cars tab from the main menu. That said, even the most affordable of Forza Horizon 5’s best cars is going to cost you at least one million in-game credits, with most of the vehicles below going for north of 2,000,000 CR. 

So to buy them you’ll have to complete dozens of races. Make sure to regularly cash in on the free Wheelspins Forza Horizon 5 hands out, too, as these rewards can seriously fatten your wallet. That said, let's take a look at ten of Forza Horizon 5's fastest cars.

Ten of Forza Horizon 5's fastest cars

Koenigsegg One: 1 2015

(Image credit: Playground Games)
  • Rating: 983
  • Price: 2,800,000 CR
  • Class: S2
  • Speed: 10
  • Handling: 9.5
  • Acceleration: 7.0
  • Launch: 7.6
  • Braking: 10
  • Off-road: 4.3

You won’t find a faster car in Forza Horizon 5 than this sleek monster. Fun fact: The 'One' earned its name by being the first car in the world to boast a megawatt of power. Don’t you love it when speed and science combine? 

Koenigsegg Agera RS 2017

(Image credit: Playground Games)
  • Rating: 980
  • Price: 2,000,000 CR
  • Class: S2
  • Speed: 10
  • Handling: 9.7
  • Acceleration: 7.0
  • Launch: 7.6
  • Braking: 9.7
  • Off-road: 4.3

More or less as fast as the One and with slightly better handling, the Koenigsegg is a (vaguely) more sensible purchase than its dearer sibling. 

Koenigsegg Jesko 2020

(Image credit: Playground Games)
  • Rating: 971
  • Price: 2,800,000 CR
  • Class: S2 
  • Speed: 10
  • Handling: 10
  • Acceleration: 6.9
  • Launch: 7.4
  • Braking: 9.0
  • Off-road: 4.4

This is the only car on this list that boasts a perfect rating for both speed and handling. You’ll probably have to finish Forza Horizon 5’s campaign before you bank up enough credits to buy this beauty, but there’s no denying it's an amazing supercar. 

Rimac Concept Two 2019

(Image credit: Playground Games)
  • Rating: 963
  • Price: 2,000,000 CR
  • Class: S2
  • Speed: 9.1
  • Handling: 7.5
  • Acceleration: 9.9
  • Launch: 10
  • Braking: 9.3
  • Off-road: 3.8

Thanks to that incredible launch rating, there’s no other car that’s quite as quick out of the blocks as this Rimac. Just don’t expect the world when it comes to off-road handling. 

Bugatti Divo 2019

(Image credit: Playground Games)
  • Rating: 958
  • Price: 3,000,000 CR
  • Class: S2
  • Speed: 9.6
  • Handling: 9.9
  • Acceleration: 10
  • Launch: 6.2
  • Braking: 9.5
  • Off-road: 4.4

With a blistering 9.6 speed, only the other elite cars on this list have a chance of keeping pace with the Divo. Thanks to its 9.9 handling, this is also one of the most rewarding vehicles to drive in the game. 

Bugatti Chiron 2018

(Image credit: Playground Games)
  • Rating: 927
  • Price: 2,400,000 CR
  • Class: S2 
  • Speed: 10
  • Handling: 7.9
  • Acceleration: 9.9
  • Launch: 6.1
  • Braking: 8.6
  • Off-road: 5.0

That knockout combo of 10 speed and 9.9 acceleration effectively makes the Chiron the fastest car in Forza Horizon 5. The jaw-dropping speed of that W16 engine is only matched by the French dream machine’s killer looks. 

Bugatti Veyron Super Sport 2011

(Image credit: Playground Games)
  • Rating: 913
  • Price: 2,200,000 CR
  • Class: S2 
  • Speed: 9.9
  • Handling: 7.9
  • Acceleration: 10.0
  • Launch: 5.9
  • Braking: 8.6
  • Off-road: 4.9

The Super Sport may just miss out on a perfect speed rating, but its awesome acceleration and top-notch handling means it’s still one of the faster cars with which you can tame the world of Mexico. 

Hennessey Venom GT 2021

(Image credit: Playground Games)
  • Rating: 911
  • Price: 1,200,000 CR
  • Class: S2 
  • Speed: 9.8
  • Handling: 7.4
  • Acceleration: 6.8
  • Launch: 7.4
  • Braking: 7.8
  • Off-road: 4.1

The Venom is a heavily-modified Lotus Exige with a superb 9.8 speed rating. Capable of reaching 200mph in a little over 15 seconds, you’ll earn podium place after podium place in this turbocharged V-8-powered beast.

McLaren Speedtail 2019

(Image credit: Playground Games)
  • Rating: 910
  • Price: 2,250,000 CR
  • Class: S2 
  • Speed: 9.6
  • Handling: 7.4
  • Acceleration: 6.8
  • Launch: 7.4
  • Braking: 7.4
  • Off-road: 3.7

With a name like that, it’s no surprise this is the fastest car McLaren has ever built. Get a clear stretch of road in front of you, and the Speedtail is capable of reaching up to 250mph. 

Porsche Taycan Turbo S 2020

(Image credit: Playground Games)
  • Rating: 900
  • Price: 185,000 CR
  • Class: S1
  • Speed: 10
  • Handling: 7.8
  • Acceleration: 9.7
  • Launch: 10
  • Braking: 7.2
  • Off-road: 4.4

Though the default version of this Porsche isn’t hugely quick, the Taycan Turbo that is included in Forza Horizon 5’s Welcome Pack Add-On DLC is an electrically-charged animal.

Read more
the fastest car in gta online
The fastest cars in GTA Online in 2025
The PC Gamer buying guide to the best racing wheels
Best PC racing wheels in 2025: my favorite direct drive and budget steering wheels for sim racing
Best open world games - A warrior on horseback looking at the Scadutree in Elden Ring
The best open world games
A car driving through the UK
Last call for Forza Horizon 4: It's being removed from sale in 2 days, so get it while you can
Tokyo Xtreme Racer
Tokyo Xtreme Racer brings heart, soul, and sweet handbrake turns back to the genre just when it needed them most
The WD Black SN850X and the Lexar NM790 NVMe SSDs on a pink gradient background with the PC Gamer recommended logo in the top right
Best SSD for gaming in 2025: the speediest SSDs I personally recommend
Latest in Racing
Sonic Racing CrossWorlds, showing various racing competitors hurtling through the air
Sonic Racing CrossWorlds looks like a return to the over-the-top arcade fun of All-Star Racing Transformed, and we'll get to play it this month
A masked sniper pointing his rifle in Nightmare Kart
Superb Bloodborne-inspired racing game Nightmare Kart is getting free DLC featuring sniper rifles and supercharged penny farthings
Tokyo Xtreme Racer
Tokyo Xtreme Racer brings heart, soul, and sweet handbrake turns back to the genre just when it needed them most
Need for Speed Unbound screen
Need for Speed is effectively on hold while Criterion musters entirely around Battlefield, but EA assures players the racer will return in 'new and interesting ways'
A Blue car in front of a color splash on black background in Tokyo Xtreme Racer
I'm not even a car guy, but Y2K throwback Tokyo Xtreme Racer '25 looks incredible and has thousands of Overwhelmingly Positive Steam reviews after 4 days of early access
Over the Hill screenshot
The new off-road exploration game from the makers of Art of Rally looks like Mudrunner meets Firewatch, and I can't wait to get behind the wheel
Latest in Features
A vampire with a dark castle and swarms of bats in the background.
We need to decide on a genre name for Vampire Survivors-like games before a really terrible one sticks
Olivia, Alma and a palico
I wish Monster Hunter Wilds wasn't so afraid of letting me play Monster Hunter
SteelSeries QcK Performance mouse pads overlapping on a desk
The SteelSeries QcK Performance series has reignited my excitement over the simple pleasure of a quality mouse pad… and trying to click skulls with pinpoint accuracy
OneXPlayer 2 pro on a table
I never thought a handheld PC bloated with Windows could replace my Steam Deck, but after gaming on an old OneXPlayer 2 Pro I can see now I judged it too harshly
A screenshot from the original Assassin's Creed game
Assassin's Creed: Shadows is just around the corner, so come and see the last 17 years of the series' PC graphics at max 4K settings
Beyond the Ice Palace 2 screenshots
I’m not sure what’s weirder: that someone made a sequel to a completely forgettable 37-year-old game I played as a kid, or that it was actually worth the wait