Mitsubishi Triton Raider could preview return of Ralliart brand

Reviving the Ralliart Legacy

Mitsubishi has expressed a strong desire to bring back its high-performance Ralliart sub-brand for road-going production vehicles. The Australian-developed Triton Raider may offer a glimpse into what future models could look like. This initiative marks a significant step in the brand’s strategy to reintroduce Ralliart to its showrooms, as it has been dormant for most of the past 15 years since its operations were wound down in 2010.

The last Ralliart-badged road car was the final-generation Lancer, which took the badge with it when it exited production in 2015. However, Mitsubishi did resurrect the sub-brand in 2021 by introducing appearance packs for the Pajero Sport and Triton overseas. Most notably, Mitsubishi Ralliart entered the Thailand-based Asia Cross Country Rally (AXCR) in 2022 with a tuned Triton. It has competed in the AXCR each year since, even taking out overall victory in 2025 with its ‘MV’ Triton-based rally car.

While Ralliart and Mitsubishi head office were heavily involved in the AXCR overseas, Mitsubishi Australia began work on its own flagship off-road Triton in late 2024, which has now been revealed as the Triton Raider. The Raider was developed by Victorian firm Premcar, with its headline upgrade being unique Monroe shock absorbers tuned through more than 40,000km worth of testing across Australia – including 7000km in the central Australian outback alone.

This project was preceded by Mitsubishi’s Triton Absolute and XRT concepts in 2019 and 2023 respectively, and inspired by the brand’s local efforts at the legendary Finke Desert Race with Australian motorsport icon Toby Price at the helm of a custom Triton Trophy Truck.

Though the Raider brings no performance enhancements to the Triton’s 2.4-litre twin-turbo-diesel four-cylinder, Mitsubishi Australia product strategy general manager Bruce Hampel told CarExpert the factory-backed flagship could preview Ralliart’s road-going future.

“We’ve been on this journey for quite some time, back from even the [previous-generation] ‘MR’ Triton into now [current-gen] ‘MV’. [Mitsubishi Motors Corporation] is very supportive of us,” he said at the media launch of the Triton Raider.

“They’re very proud of what they’re achieving in the AXCR series over in Thailand with the Triton there, and they’re passionate about trying to bring the Ralliart brand back into the portfolio globally at some stage in the future as well.

“That’s supporting that Raider is a potential stepping stone in that path as well.”

A Rich History of Performance

Ralliart has a storied history in both motorsport and production cars. Founded in 1984, it’s best known for its involvement in the World Rally Championship (WRC) from 1989 to 2007, winning several championships while duking it out with other iconic rally teams like Subaru.

Ralliart was also responsible for developing motorsport-derived performance models for the public, much like Subaru’s STI division. Most notable was the Lancer Ralliart, often slotting between the regular Lancer and the full-fat Evolution, alongside hotter versions of the Magna and Colt.

In line with Mitsubishi’s shift to SUVs and utes, Ralliart has turned its attention to more rugged 4×4 performance operations. That’s where the AXCR Triton was born, though production-car efforts have been limited to aesthetic and suspension tweaks for the Outlander and Pajero Sport, among others.

That said, models like the Triton Raider aren’t that far separated from the most recent, limited-run Ralliart road cars, but Mitsubishi has long made it clear that a well-rounded performance package is a must for true Ralliart cars – including more power.

Current Mitsubishi Australia board chair John Signoriello even went on record in 2023 to declare that Ralliart needed to be done “properly”, emphasising that “Ralliart is a very proud name, it’s a very strong name, and we need to do it justice”.

Looking Ahead to the Future

The closest we’ve seen to a true Ralliart production car in recent years was the Vision Ralliart Concept revealed in 2022. That car was clearly more than just a sticker pack for the Outlander PHEV on which it was based, with reports in 2023 suggesting it would produce more than 200kW of power.

Reportedly, that was the result of a more aggressive tune for the SUV’s plug-in hybrid (PHEV) powertrain, which consists of a 2.4-litre non-turbo four-cylinder engine and two electric motors. It was also due to receive chassis modifications and upgraded suspension, along with more aggressive styling and improved aerodynamics.

This concept was allegedly set to launch in production form in 2024, but that never eventuated. It was followed by the Triton XRT Concept in 2023, which looks much like a mix between the AXCR Triton and the Triton Raider.

In any case, Mitsubishi Australia’s frame vehicles product strategy manager, Rod Pinedo, told CarExpert that Triton Raider was intended to demonstrate customers’ desires to Mitsubishi’s Japanese head office, supporting the case for a revival of the Ralliart brand.

“It’s about showcasing what our customers want, what our customers do,” he said.

“[Mitsubishi] actually sells a lot of cars in Southeast Asian markets, and we are a unique market for them in reality … it’s basically passing on that message of ‘this is what Australian customers do with their vehicles’ [that] was the task.

“It was not convincing [them]; it was just basically showing them two things. This is what our customers want, and this is how we can make it happen using local experience and expertise, like the Premcar partnership. Those are the two elements that took a long time, but we got there.”

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