The garage door slammed when I realized the car I wanted wouldn’t appear in any storefront. I felt the small, sharp panic of missing a seasonal drop as other players streamed by with the new paint jobs. I told myself I’d map the fastest route to every exclusive—because if you miss one, it can sting.
I’m going to walk you through what the Car Pass actually gives you, how the weekly releases work, and where you can still score rarities without spending. You’ll get the facts, the calendar, and the judgement call: is the pass worth the price?
If you prefer a quick framing: the Car Pass is a paid bundle that adds 30 exclusive vehicles over time. It’s priced around $24.99 (≈ €23) and places those cars directly into your garage the week they’re released if you own the pass.

All Forza Horizon 6 Car Pass vehicles
The in-game roster already lists eight of the Car Pass entries and their drop dates.
Playground Games confirmed the first wave of Series 1 Festival cars. The Car Pass will deliver 30 vehicles in total, released weekly. If you buy the pass, each week’s car appears automatically in your garage—no grinding required.
| Year of Origin | Model | Date of Release |
|---|---|---|
| 1990 | Nissan #12 Skyline GT-R JTC | May 19, 2026 |
| 2024 | Koenigsegg Gemera | May 28, 2026 |
| 2008 | Honda Civic Type R | June 4, 2026 |
| 1972 | Datsun #269 Attacking the Clock Racing 240Z | June 11, 2026 |
| 1998 | Nissan Skyline GT-R 40th Anniversary | June 18, 2026 |
| 2023 | Toyota GR Corolla | June 25, 2026 |
| 1974 | Maza #123 Mad Mike 808 Wagon | July 2, 2026 |
| 2023 | Audi R8 Coupe V10 GT RWD | July 9, 2026 |
Those eight are the concrete starts; Playground has said there are 22 more to come. I’ll update the list as each drop is confirmed. Think of the schedule like a keycard to a secret garage: you get one swipe per week.
What cars are in the Forza Horizon 6 Car Pass?
The table above names the currently confirmed entries. Expect a mix of classics, modern hypercars, and event liveries—Playground has already split Series 1 between festival rewards and Car Pass drops. Follow Playground Games’ Twitter and the official Forza channels for each weekly reveal; the community on Reddit and Discord also picks apart every image and tag for early clues.
How the Car Pass schedule affects your garage
Every Friday in the Series 1 calendar feels like a small release day in the live game economy.
Cars arrive weekly and are tied to the Car Pass ownership: buy the pass through the Microsoft Store or within the Forza menus (Xbox, Windows Store), and those vehicles will populate your garage on release day. If you’re on Xbox Game Pass for Console/PC, the pass is still a separate purchase. For collectors, that predictability removes the grind.
How do I get Car Pass cars in Forza Horizon 6?
Buy the Car Pass via the in-game storefront or Microsoft Store, and the cars come to your garage automatically when their release date hits. If you don’t own the pass, the vehicles remain exclusive to the pass—though some may appear later through Wheelspins or events (Playground’s patterns vary by season).
Other ways to score exclusives without the pass
I’ve tracked rarities appearing via Wheelspins, festival rewards, and Collection Journal completions across Tokyo districts.
Wheelspins are luck-based, so plan accordingly: you can win exclusive liveries, credits, and occasionally cars. The Collection Journal—complete tasks around Tokyo and you’ll add specific exclusives to your list. For players who want to chase rarities without buying the pass, combine focused exploration with Festival playlist completion and active participation in Series events.
Is the Car Pass worth it in FH6?
If you value guaranteed, predictable additions to your garage, paying roughly $24.99 (≈ €23) for 30 guaranteed cars feels reasonable—especially if you’re a collector. If you enjoy the hunt, you can score a handful of exclusives for free, but you’ll miss the certainty and timing that the pass provides. Consider your playstyle: do you want the cars handed to you, or do you prefer the thrill of chasing them down?
There are tools that help you decide: Forza forums, the Forza Hub app, and community trackers on Reddit compile leaks and calendars so you can judge the pass’s ROI for yourself. I monitor developer posts from Playground Games and publisher notices from Xbox Game Studios so I don’t get caught off guard.
Playground’s weekly cadence means momentum builds—the Car Pass acts less like a one-off purchase and more like a slow-release seasonal campaign. If you collect liveries, tune for specific meta cars, or play in shared garages, that steady drip changes how you plan builds and events.
Whether you buy the pass, grind the Wheelspins, or chase the Collection Journal, Forza Horizon 6 keeps the toybox rotating—so which route will you bet on to fill your garage this season?