Home » Miata Is Still Always The Answer

Miata Is Still Always The Answer

2024 Mazda Miata Mx 5 Ts
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I’ve been trying to think of a car that’s been iteratively improved for as long as the Miata (or MX-5 if you prefer) without becoming a fundamentally different car. The F-150 is an incredible truck and, yet, you’d never mistake a new one for a ’90s model, let alone one from the ’60s.

A Porsche 911? Amazingly fun and capable, in every generation, serving approximately the same audience and purpose no matter which one you buy. Even then, a 993 generation 911 does not feel like a 996, which does not feel like a 991. They’re all 911s and they’re all amazing, but they’ve grown bigger and nicer over time. That’s generally a good thing.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Mazda has somehow nailed making four generations of Miata without aggressively changing the formula. If you park an ND Miata next to an NA Miata they are both entirely the same layout and roughly the same size (the wheelbase has increased by less than two inches). Even with all the new options and safety equipment the newest soft top, magically, is within a few hundred pounds depending on trim and that added heft is more than compensated for by an increase in horsepower.

I borrowed a 2024 Miata MX-5 in Grand Touring trim, with the six-speed, for a trip up to Lime Rock Park. I’d heard from friends that changes to the steering rack and LSD resulted in an even better Miata. This made me nervous. It’s not hard to imagine Mazda making a Miata so good that it’s no longer quite a Miata.

As usual, I was worried about nothing. The 2024 Miata is, indeed, better than the old one, while still being every bit a Miata.

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The Basics

Mazda Mx 5 Motor Large
Photo: Mazda

Never has the term “the basics” been more appropriate, for even in the highest-end Grand Touring trim the Miata is still one four-cylinder engine connected via either a manual or automatic transmission to the rear wheels.

  • As-tested price: $36,200 (with $1,165 in delivery/handling fees)
  • Powertrain: 2.0-liter DOHC inline-four
  • Transmission: Six-speed manual
  • Combined power: 181 hp/151 lb.-ft. of torque
  • MPG: 26 mpg city, 34 mpg hwy, 29 mpg combined
  • Only option: $750 for Snowflake White over Tan Nappa interior
  • Thing you definitely couldn’t have spec’d on an NA Miata: rear cross-traffic alert

What Did They Change And Should You Be Mad About It?

2024 Mazda Miata Mx 5 Rear 1

I was up at Lime Rock Park ostensibly to help Parker with his Lucid experiment, so I’d have been fine driving up in my Honda CR-V Hybrid. Thinking it would be a nice day I instead ordered up a new MX-5. This was the correct choice.

Lime Rock Park sits like a pat of butter nestled in mashed potatoes, though in this analogy the mashed potatoes are the Taconic Mountains, which are a part of the northern end of the Appalachians. If you drive a little further north and east you’ll hit the Berkshires.

Normally, the smoke coming from the Massachusetts side of the border is of the jam band sort and usually not anything to worry about. On the day I was up at Lime Rock the whole place smelled like a campfire and what I took to be a National Guard Blackhawk helicopter circled overhead a few times before flying towards wildfires in the area.

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2024 Mazda Miata Mx 5 Top 1

The dull white smoke in the low winter sun collecting in the little valley only enhanced the golden hues and made even my iPhone photos look good, but I’m getting pretty damn tired of running into wildfires everywhere I go (Texas, California, the Catskills just the weekend before). This is a bad sort of change.

A better sort of change is the revised steering system in the new Miata. If there’s one issue people had with the initial version of the ND platform (this is, in Miata parlance, the ND3) it was the electrical steering. Whenever sports cars drop hydraulic steering this happens. People freaked out about the way the 991 felt compared to the 997 911 and then mostly got over it as subsequent iterations added more feel back into the wheel.

2024 Mazda Miata Mx 5 Steering 1

When I drove the GR86 my sense was that its steering was better than the last Miata I’d driven, though there was enough of a gap in time that it was hard to say for sure. Now that Mazda has improved the steering I feel more comfortable in saying the initial ND1/ND2 steering is probably less communicative. Not only does the new steering provide more feedback, it’s also an improvement on the interstate, where the Miata floats a little less at over 65 mph than the older iterations.

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The other notable improvement is a new differential. None of these changes should make you mad unless maybe you have an ND1 Miata.

The Return Of Yaw-Damping

As super engineer Dave Coleman points out in the interview above, the ND is an old ass car by modern standards (it’s been around for basically a decade at this point) so Mazda has been able to make small changes they wouldn’t usually be able to make. As he points out, the pre-load on the limited-slip differential in the first two iterations of this platform was too high, which would upset the car during trail braking.

Is yaw-damping back? Yes, yaw-damping is back. I learned about this concept when I drove the AWD CX-70 and now it’s come back up again with the new RWD MX5. In the ND3, what this means is that there’s more lock-up on corner entry so you’re more stable as you roll into a turn, and a little less lock-up on corner exit so the car will hopefully stay pointed where you think it’s supposed to point as you drive out of the corner. It’s why they call it an “asymmetric” limited-slip differential.

2024 Mazda Miata Mx 5 Garbox 1

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Dave is both smarter than I am and a better driver so you can watch the interview if you want more. In practice, this means that I could shove the MX-5 hard into the tight corners of the FCP Euro Proving Grounds autocross course and then blast out of them without the nose popping up and understeering myself into the grass. Not like I’ve ever done that there before … on this exact track … in a RWD sports car. Nope. Not I.

It’s Just A Happy Golden Retriever Puppy You Can Enjoy Every Day

2024 Mazda Miata Mx 5 On Track 1
Photo: Chris Taylor

Parker was kind enough to pay for Lime Rock Park’s excellent catering and so all of his friends abandoned the track for an hour to eat. I shoved some food in my mouth and then proceeded to eat three chocolate chip cookies before deciding to take as many laps as I could sneak in on the autocross before everyone else came back.

I should have driven first and eaten second, but I refer you to the earlier statement about me not being that smart. I also lack impulse control when it comes to cookies and sports cars.

A Miata is just so much fun. Especially a convertible when you’re wearing a helmet. While 181 horsepower is paltry by modern standards, the high-revving four sounds better than it should in the open air. The car is so light and the gearbox so predictable that even an uncoordinated, chocolate-filled pretender like myself can at least feel like I’m wringing 98% out of the car.

2024 Mazda Miata Mx 5 Carplay 1

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A smarter man would have stopped before he felt like he was going to fill his Bell helmet with regurgitated cookies. I did not. I just kept lapping until I felt like I was a turn away from barfing.

Later in the day I gave a couple of Parker’s crew a ride around the track in the car and they all looked at me like I was a hero. I was not! Mostly I was just oversteering the car necessarily and driving like the steering wheel was connected directly to my testicles. Fast driving doesn’t always feel fast, but oversteer almost always does.

Many cars are faster than a Miata. A few are lighter. The car I drove before this one on the same track was a vintage Alfa Giulia set up for racing, which is a truly visceral experience. The Miata wasn’t any less enjoyable, really, and it also comes with CarPlay and a functioning air-conditioner.

Inside, the cabin feels modern enough and it even has an almost usable cupholder attachment (it only fell out twice!). HVAC controls are of the tactile kind, which is good because you never want to take your eyes off the road in Miata. The “touchscreen” remains a non-touchscreen when using Mazda’s infotainemnt functions, but becomes a touchscreen when using CarPlay, which is a choice you quickly get used to.

The trunk is big enough to hold a racing helmet, a toothbrush, some toothpaste, and possibly even a flannel for your face. If you wish to add new shoes and a case, you’ll want to make sure it’s a small one.

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And that’s the point. If you don’t have kids or big dogs or other such attachments, you can drive this thing every day. If you’re lucky enough that your life is enriched (or encumbered) by an abundance of loved ones, you could easily make this a second car to enjoy on weekends.

If You Can Find A Better New Convertible Sports Car For Under $38k, Buy It

There’s that Internet cliche about the perfect two-car garage, where someone sees a Suburban parked next to a Lotus and says “perfect two-car garage.” I think that’s true of the Miata and any other car, including another Miata.

ND3 Miata and NA Miata? Perfect two-car garage!

2024 Mazda Miata Mx 5 Top 4

Miata has long been the answer for every car need because the cars are approachable enough to be enjoyed by anyone, affordable enough to be used in whatever perverse way you can imagine, and commonplace enough that no one will be mad when you modify it to your liking.

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The new one is just a little better than the one that came before it, so I can say with confidence that the Miata is still the answer… so long as you’re willing to ask the right question.

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All photos by the author unless otherwise noted.

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Chris D
Chris D
22 days ago

I’ve been mulling over buying a new Miata, which would be the first brand new car in my (now rather long) life. This review is not making resisting the temptation any easier! It will have the 6-speed, and that amazing Soul Red Crystal Metallic paint. (The blue is not available for some reason…)
I’m not looking forward to dealing with the dealership. And insurance and registration fees will probably be outrageous for a few years.

The early ’25s will be warmed-over ’24s and the late ’25s will most likely be hybrids. Mazda will probably manage to engineer something amazing with the hybrids, but can you even get a hybrid with a 6-speed manual?

The Mazda dealerships in my area have mostly Soviet Industrial Gray colored Miatas in stock, so anything nice has to be ordered. Sigh… you can get 0% financing on in-stock ’24s… maybe get one of the cement-colored ones and have it resprayed in British Racing Green…

Freelivin2713
Freelivin2713
27 days ago

Besides the stupid “tack an upright screen to the dash”…I’ve been hearing about Miatas forever and want to get one eventually when I can…they sound like so much fun!

Ron Gartner
Ron Gartner
28 days ago

Anyone want to take a foot out my spine? Please. I’d love to own one.

Chris D
Chris D
22 days ago
Reply to  Ron Gartner

Just put the top down.

Facetiousness aside, try a Toyota Solara on for size. It’s not a Miata, but they are very dependable and everyone who has one absolutely loves it. It’ll run forever, actually fits four people and has a massive trunk as well. Or maybe a Toyota Celica convertible, which can be found with a manual transmission. Craigslist can be your friend.

Miata@Last
Miata@Last
28 days ago

I went from a 2000 VW Cabrio to a 2007 Eclipse Spyder, and then 2024 comes around and the Spyder is nearly dead and convertibles are few and far between. Both kids are out of the house, no dog to speak of, so a 2016 six speed ND is my new daily driver. I love this car. It’s closer to my old Honda Nighthawk 750 than it is to my old Eclipse Spyder. Every time I drive it, even for commuting, it’s just a ton of fun. After falling in love with the original back in the late 90s, I’m finally behind the wheel.

Myk El
Myk El
29 days ago

♫ Tempted by the fruit of Miata
Tempted; buy the car if you wanna ♫

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
29 days ago
Reply to  Myk El

♫ Wanta Miata, Wanta Miata
Wanta Miata, Wanta Miata
You in truck so big and squirrely, you need Miata in a hurry!
Wanta Miata, Wanta Miata♫
(UH, Huh)

Last edited 29 days ago by Urban Runabout
Bob
Bob
28 days ago
Reply to  Myk El

Oh, bravo to you both.

ESO
ESO
21 days ago
Reply to  Myk El

“Tempted; but the truth is discovered”

Birk
Birk
29 days ago

I’ve soft-shopped (borrowed from another Autop) Miata/Fiata for more than a decade, including several test drives. Used prices remain pretty high for the ND. I keep coming back to the question of why Miata over a slightly older Boxster/Cayman or even 911 for my $25-$30k “driver’s car.” The Porsches, while more expensive to maintain, seem like so much more car for the money. I don’t track, but have some glorious back roads just out my door. Anyone?

Dan Parker
Dan Parker
29 days ago
Reply to  Birk

Depends on you, really. Where do you fall on the slow-car-fast kind or fast-car-slow spectrum? How important is space/comfort? I daily’d a couple of miatas for years in my 20’s and loved ’em, but recently drove my boss’s ND and was more conflicted. Still a fantastic car, but I don’t think I could deal with it as a daily anymore.

Birk
Birk
29 days ago
Reply to  Dan Parker

I daily a diesel Wrangler on beadlock 38s, but the last “car” I owned was a 500 Abarth. Super fun to drive at 10/10ths everywhere, but certainly times in the mountains (and highways) when an extra 50-100 hp would’ve been welcome. And as I get older, the comfort side gets more important.

Scorp Mcgorp
Scorp Mcgorp
28 days ago
Reply to  Birk

I’m in an almost identical spot. i daily a 3.6 gas Wrangler on 35s now, but had an Abarth 500 for 6 years before that. do i miss the go-kart style driving and ridiculous noises of that little Egg? absolutely. did it need another 100 HP? no, but it would be fun.

but now i can go places i never could with the rubber band tires and low ground clearance, and i can take the top off.

And in the end, with 4 teenage kids, i can take them all on a nice ride together, which i could never have done with the Egg, or a Miata, which i’ve dearly wanted for years too. somedays when they’re all out of the house i’ll revisit the concept

EXL500
EXL500
28 days ago
Reply to  Birk

Maintenance costs?

Dan Parker
Dan Parker
28 days ago
Reply to  EXL500

True, tires and brakes will be a helluva lot cheaper on the Miata.

OptionXIII
OptionXIII
29 days ago

My buddy has owned and tracked various cars – an LT1 Camaro, a 2020ish Camaro SS, and his current RSX that he got to try to keep costs down. That hasn’t worked so well.

He’s been watching me bang out track sessions with no issues at all in my 2001 while he’s blown an engine, had to swap in an LSD to deal with the torque bump from a K24, and cooked brakes as a result of the higher speeds from both of those, among other issues. He tried cross shopping a few other cars, but finally settled on a new Miata. He couldn’t find a new one in any color other than some shade of black/white/grey, so went for a low mileage 2021.

I think he’s finally found a car he’s going to keep for a long time and be happy with.

TXJeepGuy
TXJeepGuy
29 days ago

I bought an ND1 earlier this year as a toy, and I love driving it. Have gotten to take it to one track day at COTA so far and it was a blast. It was my 40th birthday present to myself. When I was younger I often thought about buying one as a daily, and honestly now that I have one, I wish I had done it sooner.

EXL500
EXL500
28 days ago
Reply to  TXJeepGuy

I’m hoping to get one for my 71st. I’m 70 in a few weeks.

I’d also be interested in an NC power hard top.

Last edited 28 days ago by EXL500
Fugatti
Fugatti
29 days ago

I have a NA that’s a bit of a beater 2nd car, this is a tempting upgrade to make it more of a reasonable commuter. Then again I bought mine for 3k, hard to think a new one is 35k better…but I still might go test drive one to see how it compares

Prowler
Prowler
29 days ago

I had an ND2 RF for a brief period of time and it moved me like few cars that I’ve ever driven. I did purchase lower seat tracks due to my height and build 6’1 & 205lbs. While snug, it induced big smiles every day.
I recently bought a 3rd gen 3 Hatch 6sp to scratch the Mazda ethos itch and it’s practical for my 6 year and serves it’s commuter/beater purpose well.

While I’ve always been a Porsche and Honda fan boi, I’ve really come to appreciate the driving dynamics of Mazda.

I am now a big fan of slow car fast.

3WiperB
3WiperB
29 days ago

I’m new to this Miata thing, but yes, just drive one and I think you will understand. My dad had a 1960 MGA when I was growing up, and still has it. I bought my ’79 MGB about 5 years ago and it was fun. This summer when the MGB started giving me problems (or more problems than usual), I decided to buy myself a 2006 NC Miata. It’s been nearly perfect and puts a smile on my face every time I drive it. I recently bought my son a 2016 ND Miata and he’s in love with his too. He’s daily driving his with snow tires on it currently (while mine sits in a garage in the winter), but can’t be much happier and it’s totally fueled his passion for cars that I had seen brewing over the past couple years. So yeah, I went from 0 to 2 Miatae in about 4 months and have no regrets. They are as reliable as anything out there, there’s a great community of owners, they aren’t crazy to insure, and the gas mileage is way better than you would expect for something so fun (lifetime on our ND is nearly 35mpg in mixed driving). The MGB will be for sale in the spring and I’m all in on Miata now.

Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
29 days ago
Reply to  3WiperB

The more I think about what my next car will be, the more I think it will be a Miata. Glad to hear your son is snowing it. That would be me. As it’s currently snowing where I live.

3WiperB
3WiperB
29 days ago

I’d say Miata on winter tires is slightly better than a regular car on good all-season’s. It’s competent but not outstanding. It’s still a really light car. I’ve had an Astra and a Volt with winter tires and those were both transformative. The Volt, with all that weight down low was so good with winter tires that I would have to turn off the traction control if I was in snow or slush, or the car would decrease power too much.

Turbotictac
Turbotictac
29 days ago

There’s a reason I have two spiced up Miatas in my driveway, and have owned 7 total. As well as using them for my username here.

Otter
Otter
29 days ago

a flannel for your face”
So you’re saying a Miata could tempt me away from my little BMW?

Aaronaut
Aaronaut
29 days ago
Reply to  Otter

So, did I just not realize that Matt is British? A “flannel”??

No Kids, Just Bikes
No Kids, Just Bikes
29 days ago
Reply to  Aaronaut

I don’t know what a face flannel is. Is that British? Cause I have LOTS of flannels. Me and everyone else that was alive when Kurt Cobain was.

Aaronaut
Aaronaut
29 days ago

Yeah, for me “flannel” is either a flannel shirt or the actual fabric. But I learned the hard way when visiting the UK that “washcloth” is not a term people know over there.

Lord of the Zipties
Lord of the Zipties
29 days ago
Reply to  Aaronaut

I think the line was a reference to the Squeeze song Tempted

Otter
Otter
29 days ago

Yeah. Tried to be clever but this clearly went whizzing over a lot of heads. Or maybe Squeeze (and I) are just old.

Nsane In The MembraNe
Nsane In The MembraNe
29 days ago

Miata is love. Miata is life.

Xt6wagon
Xt6wagon
30 days ago

So I still don’t fit? NA was fine. NB LOVED to cut off my legs as the tilt steering wheel was a future invention. So Instead they installed the steering wheel so low it might rub on floor mats.

Turbotictac
Turbotictac
29 days ago
Reply to  Xt6wagon

Floor mounted seats, flat aluminum door cards, and a steering wheel spacer make a world of difference. I know someone who is 6’4″ and drives one comfortably.

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