Forza Horizon 6: Toyota 2000GT Auction House Buying Guide
The 1969 Toyota 2000GT is an absolute icon of Japanese automotive history, and it is a car almost every player wants in their garage when diving into Forza Horizon 6. However, before you rush over to the Auction House with your hard-earned credits, there are a few things you should know. Buying this car off the market isn't always the smartest move, and if you do decide to buy a duplicate, you need a solid strategy to avoid overpaying or losing out to faster snipers.
Here is a practical breakdown of how to handle the Toyota 2000GT in the Horizon 6 market.
Why You Should Think Twice Before Buying Your First 2000GT
If you do not own a Toyota 2000GT yet, stay away from the Auction House entirely. The game literally hands you one for free if you are willing to do a tiny bit of exploring.
The Free Alternative: North Ito Barn Find
The 1969 Toyota 2000GT is natively tucked away as a Barn Find in the North Ito region. Once you unlock the rumor, you just need to head over to the beach search zone. The barn sits quietly inside a small copse of trees right on the southeastern edge of that zone, near the Minka House. Drive up, trigger the cutscene, and the car is yours without spending a single credit.
A Niche Performer, Not a Meta Monster
It is also worth managing your expectations regarding performance. The 2000GT is a fantastic, great-feeling B-Class retro circuit car. It handles beautifully and has an incredible vintage charm. However, it is not a dominant, competitive online meta vehicle that will automatically win you every high-tier race.
Because everyone gets one for free, the only real reason to buy extra models on the Auction House is if you are a dedicated car collector who wants multiple distinct tuning builds—such as keeping one completely stock, turning one into a drift missile, and building another for B-class racing.
Auction House Strategy (If You Are Buying a Duplicate)
If you already have your free barn find and are committed to purchasing a duplicate model, you will need to navigate the Auction House carefully. Because the market moves incredibly fast, you need to optimize your game to give yourself a competitive edge.
1. Speed Up Your Menu Loading Times
The Auction House marketplace relies heavily on split-second interactions. If your menus lag, someone else will grab the car before you.
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Head into your main gameplay settings menu.
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Turn off the "Moving Background" option.
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By disabling this, you reduce visual clutter and force the game UI to load active listings significantly faster, minimizing lag during refreshes.
2. Master the Quick Buyout Input
Never click on an individual listing to open its dedicated page. The loading delay on that animation takes too long, and the car will almost certainly be gone by the time it loads. Instead, use the quick-menu method:
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Set your search filter to the 1969 Toyota 2000GT.
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The moment the search results populate, press the Y button on your Xbox controller.
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This brings up a quick-action overlay menu. Quickly scroll down and hit Buyout to finalize the transaction instantly.
3. Watch Out for the 20 Million Credit Trap
Be highly aware of what you are actually paying.
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Base Value: The standard base valuation for the Toyota 2000GT sits at 1,000,000 CR.
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The Trap: You will frequently see these cars listed with a massive 20,000,000 CR max buyout fee.
These extreme price tags happen because players with "Legendary Tuner" or "Legendary Painter" status have applied their own custom assets to the car. The game allows these creators to completely bypass standard pricing caps. Unless you are explicitly looking to buy that specific creator's rare aesthetic design or highly optimized performance tune, ignore these listings. Keep refreshing until you find a reasonably priced listing closer to the actual value of the car.
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