
The Ford Mustang Dark Horse is returning Down Under in 2026 saddled with a new Aussie-exclusive special edition that’ll be capped at 250 units. Said special edition takes the form of the locally fitted ‘T8-Spec Pack’ designed and developed by Ford Australia and Triple Eight Race Engineering.

No changes have been made to the standard Dark Horse recipe for 2026, meaning you still get a 350kW/550Nm 5.0-litre V8, Torsen limited slip differential, MagneRide suspension, Brembo brakes, plenty of attitude and all the other Dark Horse goodies.
New for this year however is the T8-Spec Pack that elevates the halo muscle car’s dynamics to a new level, albeit for an extra $33,898 before on-road costs.
For the price of a warm hatch back, the T8 treatment nets you wider 19x10.5 front and 19x11-inch rear alloy wheels shod with fat and sticky Pirelli P Zero Trofeo RS tyres, an enlarged rear spoiler and track-only splitter upgrade, retuned (firmer) dampers, springs and sway bars, blue exterior accents and brake callipers, Recaro sports seats and a unique gear shifter.



All 250 examples will be fitted with the six-speed manual transmission and finished in the new Avalanche (grey) prestige paint hue – as opposed to the Molten Magenta, Orange Fury and Adriatic Blue that’ve been added to the standard Dark Horse’s palette.
Included in the inflated asking price is an invitation to an “exclusive track experience” at Queensland Raceway in the first half of 2027 that’ll be attended by the Triple Eight team and, of course, Ford Australia.


Ford has confirmed to carsales the first customer Dark Horses will be handed over in the fourth quarter of the year, with the first T8-Spec Pack deliveries to start slightly later due to the local upfitting setup.
How much does the 2026 Ford Mustang cost?
EcoBoost (a) – $72,990
GT – $84,990
GT (a) – $87,990
GT Convertible (a) – $93,666
Dark Horse – $104,990
Dark Horse (a) – $104,990
Dark Horse w. T8-Spec Pack – $138,888
*Prices exclude on-road costs
