No. In the current model years, the Honda Accord is powered exclusively by turbocharged four-cylinder engines, not a V6.
Current engine lineup
To understand what powers today’s Accord, here are the available four-cylinder options and how they drive.
- 1.5-liter turbocharged inline-4: approximately 192 horsepower and 192 lb-ft of torque, paired with a continuously variable transmission (CVT).
- 2.0-liter turbocharged inline-4: about 252 horsepower and 273 lb-ft of torque, paired with a 10-speed automatic transmission (no manual option).
These engines reflect Honda’s shift toward downsized, turbocharged four-cylinders that aim to balance efficiency with engaging performance, while removing the older V6 option from the lineup.
Historical context: past V6 availability
Historically, the Accord has offered a V6 in several prior generations. The most recent generation to feature a V6 was phased out around the 2017 model year, with the 2018 redesign introducing the current four-cylinder turbo lineup. In short, V6 power was once available, but it is not now.
What about performance variants?
There is no current V6 option or “V6-powered” variant in the Accord lineup. For higher performance within the modern engine family, buyers look to the 2.0-liter turbocharged engine, which delivers the strongest output in the current generation.
Summary
Today’s Honda Accord does not offer a V6 engine. If you’re seeking V6-era power, you would be looking at older generations or used models, but new buyers will find the current Accord’s performance driven by turbocharged four-cylinder powertrains instead.


