Coilovers vs Lowering Springs for Autocross

The coilover vs springs question comes up at every autocross club in the country. The answer isn't purely technical — it depends on your class, budget, and goals. A well-chosen spring set with stock dampers can beat a cheap coilover kit. A quality coilover allows ride height, spring rate, and damping adjustment that springs alone can't deliver. Here's how to think through it.

Class Rules First

This decision is partly made for you by your SCCA class:

If you're in Street class, read the SCCA Solo rules for your specific sub-class before spending any money on suspension.

Lowering Springs — When They Make Sense

A quality drop spring (25–40mm lower than stock) lowers the center of gravity, stiffens the spring rate over stock, and often improves corner balance. Combined with stock-length struts, you get meaningful handling gains at a fraction of coilover cost.

Pros:

Cons:

Best Drop Springs — Miata ND
Eibach Pro-Kit (ND MX-5) — E10-55-019-01-22
~25mm drop, progressive rate, works well with stock Bilstein shocks. Popular Street class Miata upgrade. Keeps the car within GS class rules.
~$220–$280Eibach / Summit
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Coilovers — When They Make Sense

A coilover combines the spring and damper into one adjustable unit. Better coilovers allow independent adjustment of spring preload (ride height), spring rate, and damping. For autocross, the key advantages are:

Cheap coilovers aren't always better than quality springs

A $400 Amazon coilover kit with poor damper valving will handle worse than a $250 Eibach spring set on stock Bilsteins. Coilovers are only better when the quality of the damper is there. The minimum spend for a coilover that makes sense for serious autocross use is roughly $900–$1,200.

Coilover Picks for Autocross

Best Entry Coilover Editor's Pick
Fortune Auto 500 Series
Damping adjustable, height adjustable, built in the US. The budget coilover standard for serious autocross. Spring rates and damping tuned for performance use. Available for most popular platforms.
~$1,100–$1,500Fortune Auto
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Best Mid-Range
KW Variant 3
Independent high/low-speed compression and rebound adjustment. Excellent build quality. The choice for drivers who want to tune their setup seriously.
~$1,800–$2,500KW / Summit
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Competition Pick
Öhlins Road & Track
DFV technology — mechanical dual-flow valve. Dual adjustable. The choice for serious ST competitors. Excellent damper quality that rivals motorsport-only units at a street-usable price.
~$2,200–$3,000Öhlins / dealers
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Don't Forget Alignment After Install

Any ride height change requires a full alignment afterward. Lowering changes camber, caster, and toe — stock settings at a lower ride height can result in worse handling and accelerated tire wear. Budget $100–$150 for a proper 4-wheel alignment at a shop that understands performance use. See the Autocross Alignment Guide for target specs.