In 2000, the Honda Accord offered two engine options. The four-cylinder model produced 135 horsepower, while the V6 version produced around 200 horsepower.
This article explains the two engine choices available in the 2000 Accord, what those horsepower numbers meant at the time, and how they translated to everyday driving for buyers that year.
Engine options and horsepower
The two main engine configurations defined the 2000 Accord lineup, each with its own horsepower figure.
- 2.3-liter inline-4 engine — 135 horsepower
- 3.0-liter V6 engine — about 200 horsepower
In short, buyers could choose a fuel-efficient four-cylinder or a stronger V6, depending on their needs and budget.
Rating standards and real-world performance
What horsepower means in 2000
Horsepower figures cited for the 2000 Accord were SAE net horsepower, the standard used for consumer vehicles in the United States at that time. This rating accounts for modern accessories and provides a realistic sense of the car’s on-road output.
Real-world considerations
In practice, the four-cylinder Accord delivered adequate daily performance with better fuel economy, while the V6 offered noticeably quicker acceleration and smoother power delivery, especially during highway merging and passing. Transmission choice and vehicle weight also influenced perceived performance and efficiency.
Summary
The 2000 Honda Accord offered two engine options: a 135-horsepower four-cylinder and a 200-horsepower V6. Understanding the era’s SAE net rating helps explain why the numbers appear modest by modern standards, even as the V6 provided substantially stronger performance in everyday driving.


