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2009 Lexus GS460 Reviews

You'll find all our 2009 Lexus GS460 reviews right here. 2009 Lexus GS460 prices range from $12,980 for the GS GS460 Sport Luxury to $22,550 for the GS GS460 Sport Luxury.

Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the GS's features, design, practicality, fuel consumption, engine and transmission, safety, ownership and what it's like to drive.

The most recent reviews sit up the top of the page, but if you're looking for an older model year or shopping for a used car, scroll down to find Lexus GS dating back as far as 2008.

Or, if you just want to read the latest news about the Lexus GS460, you'll find it all here.

Lexus GS460 Reviews

Lexus GS 450H F-Sport 2012 Review
By John Parry · 19 Sep 2012
Sports and hybrid are words not usually seen together. And while the F Sport version of the second-generation Lexus GS 450h is not exactly stimulating and involving to drive in a sporty sense, it does live up to its claim of performance without penalty.VALUEAt $111,900, the F Sport is $10,000 less than the Luxury Sport version, which comes with features such as a heads-up display, a tyre pressure monitor and eight parking sensors, even polyurethane-coated paint that repairs scratches when exposed to sunlight. The F Sport adds all-wheel-steer hybrid, sports suspension settings, bigger brakes, automatic high-beam, 19-inch wheels, an 18-setting driver's seat, pre-collision and cruise control systems.DESIGNYou expect Lexus quality inside and you get it. The materials, the finish, the layout and even the stitching are flawless. Not so attractive is the angular and aggressive lower lip spoiler included in the sports body kit.TECHNOLOGYPowered by a 254kW hybrid drivetrain, it accelerates from 0-100km/h in 5.9 seconds yet has a combined fuel use of 6.3l/100km, a 20 per cent improvement over its predecessor at 7.9l/100km. Emissions of CO2 have fallen to a class-leading 147g/km.And the benefits continue. A more compact hybrid battery helps expand boot space by 45 per cent to 465 litres and the redesigned chassis provides more interior space. The chassis is also stiffer and with the battery mounted lower the weight distribution is close to an ideal 50:50, which improves handling. The 3.5-litre V6 engine is now an Atkinson cycle, which has improved efficiency by 20 per cent while retaining the previous engine's 254kW output and lifting torque from 317Nm to 352Nm. An Atkinson Cycle engine has a higher compression ratio than a conventional Otto Cycle.DRIVINGMost of the time it feels as if you are guiding the F Sport rather than driving it. The first thing you notice is the lack of starter-motor noise. Push the start-stop button and the dash lights up and signals “Ready''. Flick the gear selector into drive, press the accelerator and off you go, the petrol engine kicking in only when needed and shutting itself down when coasting or stationary. There is no noise on idle and just a slight shudder when the petrol engine kicks in. A low whine when slowing indicates regenerative braking. Driven sedately it potters around without fuss, switching at will between electric and petrol. Bury the right foot and it launches itself with enough thrust to chirp the wheels on a damp surface and delivers enough seamless punch to keep you pinned back in the seat. Power application is silky smooth and linear. Acceleration is strong, even on light throttle, such is the electric motor's high torque at low revs. But the driving experience is all a bit remote; the engine note is so well muted it's barely audible, the steering feels lifeless on the straight and then there is the quirky nature of the switching between petrol and electric. Despite myriad micro-second decisions going on internally, there is no need for the driver to intervene. All the swapping and sharing is done automatically.VERDICTIt’s a large car with flat, agile cornering and a comfortable, well-controlled ride.Lexus GS 450H F SportPrice: $111,900Warranty: 4 years/100,000kmResale: 57 per centService interval: 10,000km/6 monthsSafety rating: 5 starSpare: space-saverEngine: 3.5-litre V6 petrol 215kW/352Nm; 147kW/275Nm electric motorTransmission: CVT auto; RWDBody: 4.9m (L); 1.8m (w); 1.5m (h)Weight: 1910kgThirst: 6.3 1/100km; 91 RON; 147g/km Co2
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Lexus GS 2012 review
By Ewan Kennedy · 07 Apr 2012
Until now the Lexus GS has been a smaller edition of its big brother, Lexus LS. With a big emphasis on quietness, smoothness and refinement, the just superseded GS, but no real sporting ambitions, it was steadily losing sales to the German luxury marques.All that has changed and we have just stepped out of a pair of the all-new, fourth-generation GS sedans with big smiles on our faces. In the manner of the BMW 3 Series, Mercedes E-Class and Audi A6, the upmarket Japanese sedan provides plenty of driving pleasure.Cleverly, the Japanese engineers have managed to give the GS 250 and GS 350 twin desirable attributes –it’s smooth and quiet in the Lexus manner when cruising gently but becomes a true sports sedan when you push it along hard. The engine has great induction and exhaust note and the transmission sharpens its actions to get the best torque on tap moment by moment.This truly is an excellent grand tourer, or GT, in the true sense of that often misused acronym. You could travel at high speeds in the Australian bush all day and come back feeling relaxed and refreshed.The styling has taken a new direction at the front and back, though the profile still carries cues of the just superseded GS. At the front the designers have come up with what they call the ‘spindle-grille’. This sees a tightening of the sides of the area to create a most distinctive shape that makes the mid-sized Lexus stand out from crowd.Our only criticism is that the lower areas of the bumper/spoiler look as though they will be vulnerable in carparks and over poorly designed gutter ramps. Lexus is not alone in this – but that won’t reduce the size of the bill from your favourite panel repairer.We love the interior styling of the all-new Lexus for its elegant simplicity. It could be mistaken for an Italian machine in the way the primary instruments are large, clear and easy to read at the fastest glance.The stitching of the leather on the dashboard adds to the Italian theme, as does the centrally mounted analog clock, a feature Maserati has used with great effect for generations.The integration of the centre information and entertainment screen into the central region of the dashboard is brilliant. Too many other marques have satellite navigation screens that look like an afterthought, the Lexus’s is just right. As well as being aesthetically pleasing, the central screen is well shielded from light.We don’t like drivers taking their attention off the road, but in many cases they will do so even when it creates danger, so Lexus has done the right thing in helping people minimise distraction.Lexus GS 250 is powered by a 2.5-litre V6 petrol engine that’s a heavily revised unit installed in the now superseded model. It produces more power and torque (the peaks are 154 kW / 253 Nm) than previously, but the official fuel consumption has been significantly reduced.It’s a similar story with the 3.5-litre powerplant in the GS 350, with 233 kW and 378 Nm it gives the keen driver plenty of sporting flair, yet using less fuel and producing fewer emissions than in the superseded unit.We tested both engines on demanding roads in and out of Albury and up into the Snowy Mountains and found the 2.5 is probably best described as adequate in its performance. Compensating for that is the fact that it’s well mated to its six-speed automatic transmission. The auto is quick to sense the need for more grunt and change down gears at a moment’s notice.As revheads we would go for the 3.5-litre V6 any day, but saner drivers will be more than happy with the 2.5-litre.Up to four modes are offered on the auto and on the sporting models with adjustable suspension and steering the sportier the mode, the more the driver feels in control of the GS. Four-wheel steering on topline models adds further to the sporty feeling of this bid sedan.A hybrid version of the new Lexus GS, tagged the 450h, will be introduced on May 15th. As before, the number 450 doesn’t indicate engine capacity, but the fact that Lexus considers it provides the sort of driving feel that would normally demand a 4.5-litre engine.With a staggering array of passive safety features to help you stay out of trouble, as 10 airbags should things still go badly wrong, the Lexus must be one of the safest cars on our roads.Lexus is currently importing the GS to Australia in no fewer that six grades. Rather than filling in about 10 pages with all the details, may we suggest making an appointment with your local Lexus dealer and you can work together to tailor the best car for your needs.What we will say is that there numerous body and interior colour choices; driver’s seats with as many as 20 electrically adjustable settings; Mark Levinson topline audio systems with 17 speakers; air conditioning that moistens your skin - and much, much more...Lexus’s stunning change of direction with its GS series is a bold move. But we feel it will be immediately successful. 
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Lexus GS 2012 review: road test
By Paul Gover · 04 Aug 2011
A top-secret Lexus in a burqa is not the sort of car you get to drive every day. When that Lexus drive time is also more than six months ahead of the car's showroom start, and even two months in advance of its first public appearance, things take on a very different slant.That's because Lexus knows its all-new GS, the car you cannot actually see beneath the full-coverage black camouflage, has to work. The newcomer is aimed at the same sort of people who were expected to buy the current car - successful 30-40 year-olds who might usually favour a BMW 5 Series or E-Class Mercedes - but drove away in droves.In fact, even Lexus now admits the GS is a failure at all levels - from driving enjoyment to sales. "Giving the new GS a more fun-to-drive character was the prime objective. We wanted a more fun and rewarding drive," Koji Sato, deputy chief engineer on the GS, tells Carsguide during an exclusive preview drive at Pasadena on the outskirts of Los Angeles. "We have created a sharp and responsive driving experience. There is a more connected driving experience," he promises.So the new GS is intended to deliver for people who want more than just a pair of automotive slippers for their retirement years, and Lexus is calling 11 journalists from around the world for an early taste test. It has fingers crossed for ticks in boxes.The plan is simple: a background briefing and then a fling around a carpark test course before several hours of on-road driving that varies from typical California freeways to give-and-take canyon roads which are fun driving and expose the weaknesses in most cars. But first - time in the current GS. The reminder driver is a refresher on a car that's a Camry in a formal suit.It drives more like a boat than a car, is quiet but not particularly comfortable, and ticks all the expected luxury boxes without having any personality. To sum up, today's Lexus GS is a yawn. And then I catch sight of the two burqua-wrapped prototypes promising the biggest change at Lexus since the arrival of the original compact IS.It's hard to rate a car so far from showrooms, but Lexus promises a sharper price than today's GS. The current lineup starts with the GS300 Sports from $97,814 but Carsguide is expecting the newcomer - even with a larger 3.5-litre V6 engine - to drop into the eighty-something price bracket.Value will also be boosted by everything from an 18-way electric adjustable driver's seat to what is claimed as the biggest full-colour display screen in the car business today. The California drive points to an extension of the current two-model run with the GS300 - sports and luxury, with the sports model getting a bunch of new stuff including active rear-wheel steering - with a run of other models to come including a new 450h hybrid and an F-Sport sports hero.The remake of the GS goes right down to the chassis, which is more rigid in the new model for improved safety and a better suspension platform. Lexus is keeping quiet on the finer details, but the California cars come with new suspension, upgraded 3.5-litre V6 engines - most likely with around 233 kiloWatts - and everything from adaptive variable suspension to dynamic handling with rear-wheel steering, and a stability control system that can be turned off.There is also a new exhaust system that's claimed to be noisier and a slipperier body. But the biggest driver benefit is Drive Mode Select - a bit like the switchable chassis-engine control we've seen from Subaru - that has three settings from maximum comfort through to maximum grip and feedback.We've seen the Lexus GS concept, which is Carsguide Car of the Show from the Australian International Motor Show at the start of the month, which gives a close pointer to how the production car will look. But the California burqa, and a bunch of other cabin camouflage, means we cannot give any sort of on-the-spot assessment. When I try to zip back part of the burqa body panels, briefly catching a glimpse of a dark-blue guard, a Japanese security guard rushes in to stop me.I know the car has a clock in the centre of the dash, with a new-age sound system, but everything that's remotely interesting is covered in thick black tape. Still, the boot is now a giant and handles four golf bags - up from two - and even the driver's footrest has been enlarged. The security measures on the GS run deep, and we cannot even begin driving until flaps over the door handles are locked down. When an inquisitive Californian stops to ask what movie we're filming, he is nearly mobbed by the over-eager protection team.The new GS is certain to be a five-star car, but there are none of the high-tech safety systems promised by Toyota in the past week. So the GS gets past with things like cabin airbags, ABS and ESP and brake assist, and probably with active cruise control, but not the radar or laser-guided pedestrian protection and anti-crash systems first seen at Volvo and Mercedes-Benz and coming soon in the EyeSight package at Subaru.The back-to-back comparison between the current and future GS cars shows the difference between how the car is, and how it was supposed to be. And will be. The newcomer is sharper in every way, from the driving position - which finally gets you down lower into the car with more support for corners - to the steering response and even the ride.There is more control, more feedback and - consequently - more enjoyment. Is the GS a real rival for the 5 Series, our current class benchmark? We will not know until a Carsguide drive on familiar roads, but the signs are good.The new GS sprints around the handling course at Pasadena and can even be pushed into a full-on drift through corners. That's new for any Lexus short of the IS-F hotrod. The car with rear steering goes even further, with BMW-style response to the steering, great balance under brakes, and a can-do attitude that makes driving fun. It definitely can handle more punch than I'm getting from the 3.5-litre V6.Out on canyon roads, the rear-steer car is really sporty and quicker than I expect after earlier GS experiences. It's a car with surprise and delight. The 'standard' car, most likely the Luxury model for Australia, is less enthusiastic but better than today's Sports model. It needs to be eased along, but is nice enough.There are lots of things to really like in the new GS - from the chassis balance to the giant colour display screen and a huge boot - although the seats could still be better and Lexus has failed to deliver the claimed exhaust rort. If Lexus Australia can hit the right price then the GS will be back from the dead.Even without seeing the final styling - or the cabin finish, for that matter - the new GS is impressive. It has hit almost every target set by Lexus for potential buyers, and gets a Carsguide tick. But it's only a three-star car until we can get it home for a real drive, and some comparison work against BMW and Benz. It could improve and it's very unlikely to slide. What's best is that Koji Sato is passionate about the GS and building a car that is rewarding to drive, not just another automotive appliance that keeps you cool but leaves you cold.
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Lexus GS460 2008 review
By Kevin Hepworth · 27 Jun 2008
If Lexus is synonymous with anything it is refinement. Nobody to blame but themselves for that one. Ever since the first Lexus emerged from the back door of the Toyota garage, determined to make its own way in the world the key performance target is `how quiet can we be'.The measure of how good the NVH boys at Lexus really are is in the level of criticism the badge receives for isolating the driver from the rest of the environment. At the pinnacle of that refinement evolution is the super-smooth LS460. Drifting along in its own little cocoon of silence, the LS is the current ultimate expression of no-fuss motoring. A little pricey for the average buyer, but what price such peace and quiet.Trouble is, as Lexus has found, not everybody wants to experience the world from behind layers of laminated glass and sound-deadening foam.For those with only moderately large budgets, Lexus offers the rather more sporty IS range. But what about those who like the idea of luxury — and have the budget to indulge it — but also feel the need for just a little bit of the `rough'. For those particular few there is the GS range, or — to be more precise — the GS460.The range-topper in the latest generation of GS cars has picked up much of what makes the LS a segment-leader but in a guise that promises a more visceral experience.It snorts and snarls a little more than would be acceptable for an LS, hunkers down a little more and transmits a little more of what is going on outside the cabin. But don't be fooled. It's no sporting hero, rather it's a gentleman athlete, and paradoxically, not quite the athlete the LS is. It is what it misses out on in coming to market some $50,000 more affordable — cheaper doesn't seem the right expression — that defines the GS460's ultimate athleticism.While it gets the same 4.6-litre V8 coupled to the same breakthrough eight-speed gearbox packaging the engine into the different body has taken a toll. The need for a different manifold and exhaust has stripped the GS460 of a degree of punch. Power is down 25kW while the torque has been trimmed by 33Nm over the 493Nm in the LS. The upshot is that despite less weight and a more aggressive nature, the GS is a touch less “sporty” than big brother in the Savile Row suit.While the GS can put the 0-100km/h sprint behind in a none-too-tardy 5.8 seconds, the LS can get to the same mark in 5.7s with even less fuss.Punch the GS along and the impression belies the raw figures. The car feels a little more lively, a touch more engaging than the LS.On its variable suspension the GS rides with either a comfortable firmness or a broken-surface absorbing plushness. The sportier ride actually suits the feel of the car better but neither is unpleasant.As with the LS the steering is light and less communicative than a true sports car, yet the car turns in nicely and the suspension does a grand job in controlling the considerable weight shifts at play during enthusiastic pedaling. A switchable stability control takes care of those moments when ambition overtakes ability but such is the giving nature of the system that there is little reason to turn it off outside a track environment.The classy sportsman theme continues inside the cabin, with an oddly pleasing mix of brushed aluminium and wood trim. A soft blue glow from the instrument panel is both easy on the eyes and easy to read. Lexus claims the system to be unique, relying on variable-transparency glass to minimise reflections from the gauge faces and help optimise visibility in all lighting conditions.The GS shares the wonderful Mark Levinson 14-speaker sound system from the LS along with a new arrangement of audio and telephone controls on the steering wheel.The GS460 also features 10 airbags, dual-zone climate control with pollen filter, heated and ventilated front seats with 10-way power adjustment, one-touch power windows, smart entry and start (keyless), Bluetooth mobile phone capability, rear-view camera with eight parking sensors, power moonroof, and active cruise control.The GS460 is an interesting exercise in maximising pioneering and expensive engineering. It takes much of what makes the LS an impressive unit and repackages it to embrace a small but well-heeled segment not ready to shake off the last vestiges of youth — yet not young and foolish enough to want to spend more time than necessary being uncomfortable. 
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Lexus GS 460 2008 Review
By Ashlee Pleffer · 25 Feb 2008
And one could say the same about removing a $134,900 luxury car from the comfort of North Shore roads or the stretching highways in-between weekend getaways and relocating it to, of all places, a race track.But last week I hit Eastern Creek Raceway in the graceful new Lexus GS 460, as the first Australian journo to drive one.And I was pleasantly surprised to find it quickly adapted to what initially seemed to be a foreign setting. Underneath the cover of elegance and prestige, otherwise known as the body, sits a refined 4.6-litre V8. The 460 supersedes the previous GS 430, adding an extra 300 cubic centimetres to the mix. This means the face-lifted GS is able to extract an extra 47kW and 43Nm of torque from the engine, with a textbook impressive 255kW of power and 460Nm of torque.The figures alone are enough to get you reasonably excited meeting those V8 performance expectations. But with its quiet nature and more conservative appearance, I didn't expect it to be as poised and enjoyable as it proved to be.On arrival at the track, I quickly donned a helmet and jumped in the passenger seat as my instructor for the day, four-times Australian champion and racing veteran of 20 years, John Bowe, showed me the ins and outs of the track.From the passenger seat, it was a smooth ride all the way as Bowe threw it quickly into the corners and hit even quicker speeds on the straight. Then it came my turn to play. Planting my foot showed the acceleration was quick to react, its official zero to 100km/h time reading 5.8 seconds. Hitting the straight, and with some encouragement from my co-pilot, it wasn't long before I was up to 200km/h, the GS 460 reacting in a controlled but thrilling way.The well-mannered Lexus followed demands into each turn and came out of them without a hitch — very agile around the bends. Most of the power hits at 6400rpm and it doesn't take long for the revs to rise.Looking at the car, and even when gliding around the track, it's easy to imagine the soundtrack for this model would be something like Beethoven, with the occasional Metallica riff thrown in just to remind you it knows how to release its inner devil.After a few laps, I strangely noticed a cold breeze coming through my jeans from the seat.A little concerned, I quickly enquired as to what the problem was, only to be told that as well as the heating you expect in such cars, it also has a “cooling function.”So with my legs at a comfortable temperature, my back and rear-end cushioned with the sophisticated suspension and a new eight-speed auto transmission giving a wide spread of ratios, the luxury sedan did its best to show off its sporting character.With stability control switched on, it was put to work on some corners, although it was in no way intrusive, while quick to correct your line and keep you on the straight and narrow.There are paddles on the steering wheel for the real racing enthusiast but the auto mode worked just as well. The GS 460, along with the other models in the range, gets some new styling cues as well as the updated engine, giving it a more aggressive stance. It has a new grille, a lower air intake and the front and rear bumper bars have had some work. It's not a big change, but enough to give it some added style.The mirrors and door handles get the treatment, and the wheels are new five-spoke alloys. It's not all just for looks. All the changes provide an aerodynamic advantage and reduced wind noise.To round off my afternoon, it was back to the role of passenger as Bowe took me on a couple of last hot laps of the track. This time, there was no holding back as he quickly exceeded my 200km/h display. He pushed the car to the limit, showing what it was capable of in the hands of an expert. So if one does manage to give into squealing tyres and the need for speed away from the GS 460's comfort zone, it's nice to know that it's up to the challenge. SnapshotLexus GS 460 Price: $134,900Engine: 4.6L/V8, 255kW/460NmTransmission: 8-speed autoEconomy: 11L/100km 
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Lexus GS460 2008 review: snap shot
By Neil McDonald · 08 Feb 2008
Overshadowed by the volume-selling IS sedan and larger, lavishly equipped LS sibling, Lexus has turned its attention to the GS.A revised GS range has just been unveiled at the Detroit Motor Show and arrives here in time for the Melbourne Motor Show.The big changes are under the skin, though the car does get a mild cosmetic makeover.The big news is the flagship GS gets the same 4.6-litre V8 as the range-topping LS sedan. The GS460 develops 255kW at 6400 revs and 460Nm at 4100 revs. That's 47kW and 43Nm more than the 4.3-litre GS430, which it replaces.The GS300 and GS450h carry over.Lexus Australia chief executive John Roca says the power gains bring the range-topper in line with the performance of the GS450h.However, compared with the LS460, power and torque are down in the GS460 because it misses out on the LS's direct-injection system.The V8 does share its eight-speed automatic transmission with the LS, which is lighter and more compact in the GS than the six-speed automatic it replaces.Despite the reduced power, the 4.6-litre in the GS is no slouch, hitting 100km/h in 5.8 seconds and reaching a top speed of 240km/h.Roca says apart from improved engines, the sedan gets some small visual tweaks.On the outside there is a chrome grille surround, new integrated indicators in the door mirrors and new alloys.Both bumpers have been restyled.The GS 450h gains several styling cues from other Lexus hybrids, relating to badging and hybrid blue highlights.Inside, audio and telephone controls on the steering wheel have been revised and the boot and fuel filler releases have been moved outside the drop-down switch module.All models now have an input jack for portable music players.For added security, the doors have an automatic locking function triggered when the vehicle is on the move.Roca says GS sales stalled last year, in part because the car was in runout mode.“We will refocus on improving the GS's share this year,” he says.GS sales were down 21 per cent last year, compared with 2006, while overall Lexus sales were up 14.5 per cent.The IS250 remains the best seller in the range, accounting for about half of sales.GS pricing is expected to be decided next month.Roca hopes to hold prices at current levels. That means the entry GS300 Sports should stay close to $95,000 and the new 4.6-litre V8 GS460 about $138,000. 
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