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Dodge CEO Doesn’t Deny Possible Future V8 Return For Charger

McAlear Confirms More Powertrain Variants Coming, But Stands by EV and HURRICANE Power

Dodge’s transition to electrification and turbocharged I6 powerplants has left many enthusiasts wondering if a V8 will ever return to the Charger lineup. While Dodge CEO Matt McAlear didn’t outright confirm anything, he also didn’t rule it out. His recent interview with The Drive hinted that the possibility remains—but if a V8 were to make a comeback, it would take time.

A Platform Built for Possibilities – 

2025 Dodge Charger Daytona Scat Pack Stage 2 in White Knuckle. (Dodge).

McAlear emphasized the flexibility of Dodge’s new multi-energy platform, which currently supports both fully electric and twin-turbocharged 3.0L HURRICANE I6-powered Charger models. He noted that previous generations of Dodge muscle cars saw a variety of powertrains, suggesting that future variants could bring even more options.

“If you look back across the last generation, you go through the engines between the Charger and the Challenger and the Magnum,” McAlear said. “We started out with a 3.5L V6, 6.1L V8, then a 3.6L V6, 5.7L V8, 6.4L, 6.2L, 6.2L Demon, 6.2L Redeye, 6.2L Demon 170. Do you know how many different powertrains, RWD and AWD, we had on those engines? This is a multi-energy platform that can accommodate all of that. This is just the first year, and you’ve got four powertrains that outperform every one that they’re replacing, with standard AWD? We’re just getting started. We’re going to have a lot of fun.”

No Official Plans, But No Hard “No” Either – 

2025 Dodge Charger Daytona Scat Pack Stage 2 in White Knuckle. (Dodge).

McAlear’s remarks suggest that Dodge’s focus remains on the current lineup, which includes the all-electric Charger Daytona and upcoming HURRICANE-powered SIXPACK models. However, he acknowledged that V8s are no longer considered a “bad word” within the company, hinting that future possibilities exist.

“We haven’t disclosed that,” McAlear said, when asked directly about a V8’s return. “But one of the things that’s encouraging is that with the change in leadership, you know, V8s are no longer a bad word around the company. But with anything, we still have to be compliant.”

Why a V8 Charger Would Take Time – 

2025 Dodge Charger Daytona Scat Pack Stage 2 in White Knuckle. (Dodge).

Even if Dodge were to greenlight a V8-powered Charger today, it wouldn’t hit the market overnight. Developing a new powertrain or reintroducing an existing one requires extensive engineering, testing, and emissions compliance. McAlear explained the complexities behind engine development timelines.

“You can’t just turn something on that wasn’t there before,” he said. “Even if we were to say we wanted to do it today, pick any engine. A V10. A four-cylinder. It’s a year-and-a-half, two-year development cycle, right?”

That means even if a decision was made recently, a V8-powered Charger wouldn’t realistically hit dealerships until at least 2027 or later.

Regulatory Uncertainty Plays a Role – 

2025 Dodge Charger Daytona Scat Pack Stage 2 in White Knuckle. (Dodge).

With ever-changing emissions regulations, automakers must carefully plan engine lineups to stay compliant. McAlear pointed out that political shifts can impact long-term strategies.

“We still have to find ways to keep the engines compliant,” he said. “And just because there’s a change in the administration right now, that’s only a four-year deal, right? So you have to be careful and balance it across the entire portfolio in the long run.”

McAlear also mentioned the financial challenges of keeping multiple powertrains updated with the latest emissions standards.

“You don’t want to have to spend that money if you don’t have to,” he explained. “There are thousands of suppliers, right? And then you have emissions regulations that you always have to update your engines for, and typically that’s done from year to year, because any time you have [an] update for emissions, it’s just more money you have to put into it.”

What’s Next for Dodge Performance? – 

2025 Dodge Charger Daytona Scat Pack Stage 2 in White Knuckle. (Dodge).

McAlear assured fans that Dodge remains focused on performance, regardless of powertrain type.

“The only thing I can say is that if history can tell us anything about the future, with all those powertrains I listed off,” he said, “you know, we’re always looking at ways to find best-in-class performance, to build on performance, and to push the boundaries. We don’t want to stand still at Dodge, and we don’t plan on it. There will be powertrain variations that continue to come. We haven’t even launched the SRT yet, so we still have to get into that. And who knows where we go if the business case makes sense [for a V8] and there’s potential.”

While the new Dodge Charger may not have a V8 under the hood just yet, McAlear’s comments make it clear that the brand is keeping its options open. Whether that means a future return of a HEMI-powered Charger or a different high-performance alternative remains to be seen. One thing is certain: Dodge isn’t done pushing the envelope.

Source: The Drive

Robert S. Miller

Robert S. Miller is a diehard Mopar enthusiast who lives and breathes all that is Mopar. The Michigander is not only the Editor for MoparInsiders.com, 5thGenRams.com, and HDRams.com but an automotive photographer. He is an avid fan of offshore powerboat racing, which he travels the country to take part in.

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maybe they can fund a New show with Richard Rawlings Slow but Loud.

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I wouldn’t be holding my breath for a 5.7 Hemi for this car in its present power levels, let’s hope that there’s a updated V8 that is on the shelf.

This car will weigh approximately 4900 lbs with a Hemi/ 8 auto with just rear wheel drive, good sound but not very exciting performance.

I looked at one of these new Charger Daytona scat pack stage two at my local dealership and it was 107,000 canadian dollars, i bought a new 2016 Dodge Challenger R/T scat pack 392 Shaker for 55,800.00 canadian about 40 grand american. It might have been a second slower to 60 that this thing but for the money difference i am sure i could of put a blower on it.

All the crap talk about it not fitting between the strut towers is a lie, I measured the width of the 392 Hemi in the same dealer show room in a Jeep Wrangler and got 25 1/2 inches, the strut towers on the Dodge Charger were approximately 28 1/2 inches wide at the top and got wider as you move down so lots of room for headers aswell.

They really need to bring out a much smaller car than this for all out performance, and just my opinion but turbocharged v8 s sound restricted compared to a blower on the engine.

The size of this car it should be called Monaco or Polara not Charger

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They really need to bring out a much smaller car than this for all out performance, and just my opinion but turbocharged v8 s sound restricted compared to a blower on the engine.

Because the Mustang and Camaro are flying off shelfs...

a lot of insiders say engine mounts won't work, the front carrier would require a redesign, sort of the opposite issue that the WL has receiving the Hurricane6

Honestly where the room to improve the Eagle? Head retention was already an issue, won't hold up to DI, it is heavy ... without boast it will always be the slow pig compared the the 6.... picking supercharger over Turbos because of exhaust note is classic poser.

There are two option...

Sell the Eagle as is pure Nostalgia and embarrassingly slow compared to everything else even the 4xE 2.0 but make the Boomers happy

Hand built Halo SRT... that balances on hand grenade'ing like the Corvete and Mustang Halo models, but it looks good on Magazine covers and beats the six by a few tenths for $35K upcharge, and loses to the Banshee.

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An article came out a few days ago hinting at the possibility of a Hurricane-6 with around 750hp and now it's becoming more evident that the return of the V8 engine is at hand. While a V8 may fit in a modified version of the new Charger, the question is, will it be worth it? While I don't think it would be, I have a possible theory on what a Dodge lineup could look like and how Stellantis could incorporate the V8 back into the mix.
I can almost guarantee this next V8 is NOT going to be a pushrod V8 along with the fact that it will more than likely be a twin turbo setup with small displacement and a hybrid version of the 880RE 8-Speed Gen-4 ZF transmission. The engine more than likely won't have more that 5.2L putting it between the 5.0L Coyote and the 5.5L GM DOHC engine in the ZR1, which I feel this next V8 car is going to benchmark in some ways. This powertrain is going to incorporate the integrated exhaust manifold in the head and possibly integrating the turbine housing with the head which was a design Stellantis was already working on to begin with, which could possibly save room under the hood or wherever this engine would sit. Now let's say this new "Hurricane-8" 5.2L engine by itself has enough to match the 760hp 5.2L Supercharged V8 of the last GT500, we know the Gen-4 ZF hybrid can produce 215hp so you're looking at a twin turbo V8 hybrid that produces around 975hp in street tune. Add a bit of that Demon-170 tuning magic and you're well over 1,000hp. That's all well and good but it's clear that this Charger was not meant for a V8 and personally I don't feel like a V8 fits the character of this car. Now I'm not saying that I wouldn't love to see the 750hp Hurricane-6 get mated to a Gen-4 Hybrid transmission and get some of that kind of Demon-170 tuning straight from Direct Connection for the Charger, but as for the V8, there are other things that I feel may be coming that would better suit a potential Hurricane-8. One, the return of the Viper, two, the Coronet, three, the return of the Ram 1500 TRX, four, the Return of the Ram 1500 SRT and five, a STLA: Frame Durango SRT8 & Durango Ramcharger build to fill the niche of the full-size performance SUV from Dodge. The Viper needs to return to the Dodge brand as a competitor to the Corvette, and with two trims, the 760hp twin turbo Hurricane-8 S/O Viper R/T and the 975hp/1,000hp+ capable Viper T/A, Dodge once again can reclaim that brutish American Sports car spot that the viper had. While the Coronet would not be the car to compete with the Mustang (because honestly, who cares about the Mustang at this point) The Coronet would actually more take the place of what the Challenger was as that hard performance coupe, but just a bit better. The base engine could be a 550hp Hurricane-6 H/O with the 760hp Hurricane-8 S/O Coronet R/T and the 975hp Hurricane-8 H/O SRT Super Bee at the top of the food chain. This car wouldn't have the Charger's fastback/hatchback setup, instead it would be a hard roof coupe but still big enough to have space in the back for two adults and a decent sized trunk. A 760hp Ram TRX built to trample the Raptor R needs no explanation and a 975hp Ram SRT8 street performance truck really doesn't need an explanation as it would bring back the days of the SRT10 Ram performance truck. A full size Durango with the same Durango attitude in a 900hp SUV again needs no explanation other than it's Dodge and yes, having a 720hp version of it as a bad@$$ off-roader SUV makes sense being that it's a Dodge. Sure there would be lesser versions of it with the Hurricane-6 powertrains Durango Ramcharger Rebel, Durango Ramcharger RHO and Durango Ramcharger TRX, but it makes sense for the Durango to return to it's body on frame roots. Especially if the Dodge lineup includes an STLA: Large Stealth SUV based on the new Wagoneer S with Hurricane-6 powertrains, a Gen-2 Hornet SUV on the STLA Medium platform with a hybrid powertrain based around the 2.0L Hurricane-4 EVO, especially if the engine itself makes anywhere from 305-315hp along with a Dart GLH sedan on the STLA Medium platform with the same kind of powertrain. Somewhere in here the next-gen Dakota midsize truck needs to fit in with the Hurricane-4 EVO and Hurricane-6 powertrains. This to me makes more sense than trying to reinvent this current Charger, which is fine the way it is.
Taking that approach still allows for compliance in the Mopar umbrella without taking away excitement and keeping the V8 relevant. Still leaving room for Jeep to be Jeep with the Cherokee, Grand Cherokee, Wrangler Unlimited and the the Jeep Gladiator with 4Xe and Hurricane-6 S/O powertrains, it let's Ram have it's trucks and Chrysler to move forward into the luxury realm with hybrids and EVs.

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Reading through the comments it seems our brilliant readers have thought seriously about Dodge. I think the comments are quite accurate and if combined, clearly summaries a path forward mindset for Dodge.
My thoughts support the thinking that the Charger should be in no rush to offer a V-8 but stick with the Hurricanes. Too large and heavy, the Charger is more a luxury performance cruiser, with clever SUV applications, than a muscle car.
A spinoff smaller, lighter, Challenger with far more aggressive styling on the STLA Large platform, built from day one to be a V-8 optioned vehicle would be the most direct path to historic and real Dodge muscle. I think a totally new overhead cam, twin turbo and super charged versions of a new V-8 would do the trick at a reasonable engineering and financial cost. Let’s be real, the entire North American Mopar lineup absolutely needs and would benefit with a new V-8, not just Dodge.
The SUV side of Dodge essentially could mirror Porsche in offering a family of performance SUVs and a mid-size coupe and sedan both Hurricane four based and Six Pack optioned could round out a very generous Dodge lineup, reflecting the performance formula to success that Dodge stands for. Indeed, common sense wisdom on this site from the common folks wins the day again.

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