Set language and currency
Select your preferred language and currency. You can update the settings at any time.
Language
Currency
save

2019 New York Auto Show: What to Expect

Matt Schmitz
3/11/2019
2019 New York Auto Show: What to Expect
Stay in the know
If you want to know anything, leave your contact information and we will have someone to serve you.
Send

It’s up to you, New York, New York … to save the 2019 auto-show season. Following somewhat underwhelming to downright disappointing showings from the major automotive exhibitions in Los Angeles, Detroit and Chicago, the industry’s last opportunity to awaken would-be car shoppers for this model year comes courtesy of The City That Never Sleeps. Fortunately, by the looks of things, automakers are decidedly in an Empire State of mind.

Related: More 2019 New York Auto Show Coverage

Shop the 2019 Subaru Outback near you

Used
2019 Subaru Outback 2.5i Premium
68,610 mi.
$20,300 $2,200 price drop
Good Deal
Used
2019 Subaru Outback 2.5i Limited
79,098 mi.
$20,500 $1,000 price drop
Good Deal

While this year’s lineup boasts all the requisite luxury and exotic offerings for all those “Gossip Girl” types on the Upper East Side, the show hasn’t forgotten about all of the regular folks elsewhere in the boroughs (assuming any regular folks can still afford to live anywhere in NYC), with a trio of exciting debuts from popular mainstream models. Perhaps most notable among this trinity is the cultishly adored Subaru Outback SUV/wagon, redesigned for the 2020 model year and ready to complete your rugged hiking/camping/fishing/mountain-biking/snow-shoeing self-actualization plan.

img1163096678-1554912842931.jpg

That’s in addition to overhauled versions for model-year 2020 of the Toyota Highlander SUV and Hyundai Sonata sedan. Elsewhere on the civilian-friendly front, Toyota will reveal its 2020 Yaris hatchback, and we suspect Nissan may even bring along the 2020 Versa sedan fresh off its Fort Lauderdale debut.

Meanwhile, a couple of all-new SUVs will make their big bows in the Big Apple. Hyundai will see if people flock to its Venue, while Lincoln will test the waters for its Corsair. The Hyundai is a subcompact city crossover, while the Lincoln is a compact Ford Escape-based MKC replacement, the latest in the Ford luxury brand’s adventure-themed model makeover. A pair of luxury sedans will also make their first appearances, one all-new model in the Cadillac CT5, the other a redesign of an existing model in the 2020 Jaguar XE.

lincoln-corsair-tease-19NYIAS-illo-03.jpg 2020 Lincoln Corsair teaser | Manufacturer images; photo illustration by Evan Sears

After a conspicuous absence from much of the past auto-show season, Mercedes-Benz is back with a vengeance in New York, bringing along a host of new products. New SUVs include the 2020 GLC Coupe and the GLS SUV, while high performance is also on the call sheet as the German brand rolls out AMG variants of its A-Class sedan and CLA-Class “four-door coupe.”

Oh, but you’re not actually shopping the show? Just in it for some cool-ass cars, ya say? Gotham’s got you, bro. How ’bout the Bugatti Chiron Sport 110 Ans Bugatti, commemorating a century and one-tenth of no one you know being able to afford a Bugatti? Or perhaps a one-of-a-kind Maserati Levante GTS; or Nissan’s 50-years-of-performance display of GT-Rs and 370Zs; or a high-horsepower custom Mustang and F-150 from Roush; or a Volkswagen dune buggy concept; or an all-electric sports coupe concept from a manufacturer you’ve never heard of with a model name you can’t pronounce — and that’s just the stuff we know about in advance!

Nothin’ like waitin’ till the last minute, y’all.

Following media and industry preview days, the 2019 New York auto show opens to the public on April 19 and runs through April 28 at Midtown Manhattan’s Jacob Javits Convention Center, at 11th Ave. between 34th and 40th streets. Hours are 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sundays, with official festivities kicking off at 8:30 a.m. on April 20.

Admission is $17 for visitors age 13 or older, $7 for children age 12 or younger, and free for anyone age 2 or younger; a $2 discount is offered on the general admission price for groups of 20 or more, as well as on child tickets for groups of 10 or more; early-access tickets enable entry an hour before the show opens on Friday and Saturday at a cost of $45 for adults and $17 for kids age 12 or younger. For more information, visit the show’s official website.

will be there with our team of automotive journalists to bring you all the action straight from the show floor on April 17-18. So be sure to check back in with us often in the days leading up to, during and after for our comprehensive coverage.

In the meantime, here’s everything we expect to see, so far, at the 2019 New York International Auto Show:

2020 Acura TLX PMC Edition

2019 Audi TT RS

Bugatti Chiron Sport 110 Ans Bugatti

Cadillac CT5

2020 Hyundai Sonata

2020 Hyundai Venue

2019 Infiniti Q50 Signature Edition

2020 Jaguar XE

Land Rover Range Rover Velar SVAutobiography Dynamic Edition

Lincoln Corsair

2019 Maserati Levante with Pelletessuta interior

Maserati One of One Levante GTS

2020 Mercedes-AMG A35

2020 Mercedes-AMG CLA35

Mercedes-Benz GLS-Class

2020 Mercedes-Benz GLC Coupe

Mullen Technologies Qiantu K50 electric sports coupe concept

2020 Nissan Versa

Nissan 370Z (Nissan Dream Garage celebrating 50 years of Nissan performance)

Nissan GT-R (Nissan Dream Garage celebrating 50 years of Nissan performance)

2019 Roush F-150 custom performance pickup truck

2019 Roush Stage 3 Mustang custom performance coupe

2020 Subaru Outback

2020 Toyota Highlander

2020 Toyota Yaris hatchback

Volkswagen Atlas Basecamp concept

Volkswagen ID. Buggy concept

img94448633-1554999182663

’s Editorial department is your source for automotive news and reviews. In line with ’s long-standing ethics policy, editors and reviewers don’t accept gifts or free trips from automakers. The Editorial department is independent of ’s advertising, sales and sponsored content departments.