2025 Dodge Charger Daytona Pricing Leaks
Early specifications and pricing details for the Dodge Charger Daytona First Editions have surfaced.
A YouTuber known as Butter da Insider leaked the information before it appeared on the Allpar forum. The leaked information, reportedly comes from a Stellantis computer screen, outlines two versions of these special edition electric muscle cars.
The rumored price for the R/T First Edition is $68,570 before destination charges. It comes with the eStage 1 Upgrade, which boosts output to 496 horsepower and 404 pound-feet of torque, thanks to a PowerShot mode that adds 40 hp. Exterior paint choices include Diamond Black, Triple Nickel, and White Knuckle. The interior features Demonic Red Seats with red and silver stitching, perforated inserts, heated and ventilated leather front seats, heated rear seats, and interior ambient lighting.
The car also includes a 16-inch gauge cluster, LED headlights with a full-width LED light bar, and illuminated door handles. The fully loaded version drops the red interior in favor of a Sun & Sound Group, which includes a fixed tinted glass roof and an 18-speaker, 914-watt Alpine audio system. It also comes with the Blacktop Appearance Package, featuring dark 20-inch aluminum wheels on 255/45 all-season tires and R/T graphics.
The Charger Daytona Scat Pack First Edition includes the eStage 2 Upgrade, increasing peak output to 670 horsepower for short bursts. It comes equipped with the Track Pack, featuring six-piston Brembo front brakes, staggered Goodyear Eagle F1 SuperCar 3 tires, leather and suede performance seats, and a driver experience recorder.
The Carbon & Suede Package adds carbon fiber mirror caps, Dark Bee badges, and dark 20-inch aluminum wheels. Inside, it features a carbon fiber center console, carbon instrument panel, door trim inlays, and suede lining on the instrument panel bolsters, A-pillar, and headliner. The starting price for this version is reportedly $82,170 before destination charges.
More affordable trims are scheduled to arrive early next year–and for those of you not interested in an electric vehicle, models featuring inline-six powertrains are expected later.
This article was co-written using AI and was then heavily edited and optimized by our editorial team.
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