2014 LOTUS EXIGE

1.8L I4 SuperchargedRWDMANUALgassupercharged
5-Year Cost of Ownership
$16,302 maintenance + known platform issues
~$3,260/yr · 270¢/mile equivalent · $5,159 maintenance + $8,543 expected platform issues
Common Problems & Known Issues

The 2014 Exige S uses Toyota's 2ZZ-GE engine with Lotus supercharger tuning, pushing 345hp through a 6-speed manual. While the Toyota base is reliable, the forced-induction stress and track-duty abuse create specific failure points that can be catastrophically expensive.

Supercharger Oil Starvation and Bearing Failure

Occasional · high severity
Typical onset: 40,000-70,000 mi
Symptoms: whining or grinding noise from supercharger, loss of boost pressure, oil contamination in intake system, check engine light with lean codes
Fix: Supercharger rebuild or replacement required, typically 8-12 hours labor. OEM Lotus supercharger units are $4,000-6,000, aftermarket rebuilds $2,500-3,500. Must also address oil feed line routing that causes starvation during hard cornering.
Estimated cost: $3,500-7,000

Piston Ring Land Failure (Detonation Damage)

Occasional · high severity
Typical onset: 50,000-80,000 mi
Symptoms: excessive oil consumption (1qt per 500-1000 miles), blue smoke on startup or acceleration, loss of compression, misfires under boost, metallic knocking
Fix: Requires engine removal and rebuild with forged pistons. 2ZZ ring lands crack under detonation from poor fuel quality or heat soak. Engine-out labor is 16-20 hours, plus machine work and assembly. Many owners upgrade to forged internals during repair.
Estimated cost: $8,000-14,000

Transmission Oil Cooler Line Failure

Common · medium severity
Symptoms: transmission fluid leaking from front of car, difficulty shifting when hot, burning smell, puddles under engine bay
Fix: Hard lines crack at welds or fittings corrode, especially on track cars. Replacement requires clamshell removal for access, 6-8 hours labor. Lines are $200-400, but labor dominates cost. Preventive inspection recommended every 2 years.
Estimated cost: $1,200-2,000

Transmission Mount Failure

Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 30,000-60,000 mi
Symptoms: excessive shifter vibration, clunking during shifts, movement felt through shift linkage, difficulty engaging gears
Fix: Rubber mounts deteriorate from heat and stress. Replacement is 3-4 hours requiring lift access but not clamshell removal. Polyurethane upgrades available but increase NVH. OEM mounts are $150-250 each.
Estimated cost: $500-900

Fuel Pump and Filter Clogging

Occasional · medium severity
Typical onset: 60,000-90,000 mi
Symptoms: fuel starvation during hard cornering, hesitation or cutting out above 6000 RPM, difficulty starting when hot, lean conditions under boost
Fix: In-tank fuel pump strainer clogs, especially with ethanol fuels. Filter replacement requires fuel tank drop, 4-5 hours. Pump assembly is $400-700. Many shops recommend replacing pump and all filters simultaneously given labor involved.
Estimated cost: $900-1,500

Head Gasket Failure from Heat Cycling

Rare · high severity
Typical onset: 70,000-100,000 mi
Symptoms: coolant consumption with no visible leaks, white smoke from exhaust, oil in coolant or vice versa, overheating, rough idle
Fix: Track use and boost stress cause head gasket failure. Requires engine removal, head resurfacing, new gaskets and bolts. 18-22 hours labor. Common to inspect/replace timing chain and oil pump while apart. Head work adds $600-1,200.
Estimated cost: $4,500-7,500

Clam Shell Alignment and Latch Failures

Common · low severity
Symptoms: clam won't latch properly, wind noise at speed, visible gaps in body panels, difficulty opening/closing
Fix: Fiberglass flexes and latches wear. Adjustment is 1-2 hours, latch replacement adds $200-400 in parts. Not safety-critical but annoying and affects resale. Common after any engine-out service due to improper reinstallation.
Estimated cost: $250-800
Owner tips
  • Use 93+ octane exclusively and avoid long heat-soaked restarts to prevent detonation
  • Change supercharger oil every 15,000 miles (3-year intervals) regardless of engine oil schedule
  • Inspect transmission cooler lines and clamps annually, especially before track days
  • Budget $2,000-3,000 annually for a track-driven example; $1,000-1,500 for street-only
  • Find a Lotus specialist—clamshell removal for basic service scares general shops into huge quotes
Buy only if you have access to a specialist and $3,000+ annual repair budget—these are hand-built track toys that punish Toyota components beyond design limits, but magical to drive when sorted.
AI-assisted summary drawn from NHTSA recall data, our labor-times database, and platform knowledge. Not a substitute for a pre-purchase inspection on a specific vehicle.
508 jobs across 15 categories
Building an app?
Free API access to all this data — 50 requests/day, no card required.
Get an API key →
Run a shop?
Manage repairs, estimates, and customers with ShopBase — $249/mo, all features included. Built by the same team.
Try ShopBase →