Skip to content
Chevrolet

2026 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray

5
Made in
Manufacturer
General Motors (Chevrolet)
How it's made
US-manufactured, mostly imported materials
The 2026 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray is America's iconic mid-engine sports car, assembled at GM's dedicated Corvette plant in Bowling Green, Kentucky, powered by a naturally aspirated 6.2L LT2 V8 producing 490–495 horsepower and 465–470 lb-ft of torque through an 8-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission to the rear wheels. For 2026, Chevrolet refreshed the interior with a fully redesigned driver-focused cockpit, larger screens, five new premium interior colorways, and elevated materials including leather, real metal trim, and micro-suede — all while maintaining the mid-engine proportions, removable targa top, and dual-trunk practicality that made the C8 generation a landmark. Available in 1LT, 2LT, and 3LT trims as either a coupe or convertible starting at $72,495, with optional Z51 performance package, Grand Sport handling upgrades, and a limited America250 commemorative edition honoring America's 250th anniversary — rated 10/10 by Car and Driver and named to its 2026 10Best list.
Why the USAmade Score™ is 5/10
The 2026 Corvette Stingray is final-assembled at GM's Bowling Green, Kentucky plant — America's only dedicated sports car factory — with GM itself explicitly acknowledging the use of "US and globally sourced parts". The LT2 engine is US-manufactured, but carbon fiber body panels, electronics, semiconductors, and numerous drivetrain components are globally sourced. As with virtually all modern automobiles, a significant portion of components originate outside the US.

Where to buy

  • Chevrolet
    In stock
    $70000.00
    Visit
  • Autonation
    In stock
    $76119.00
    Visit

Affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no cost to you.

Similar American-made products

Community flags

Concerns other shoppers have raised about this product. Vote to help admins prioritize what to verify. Flags an admin has rejected are hidden.

No open flags. Spot a problem?