1987 Sterling 825 sedan

“… such effortless motion, …”

1987 Sterling 825 interior
1987 Sterling 825 interior

The Sterling 825 sedan was an interesting (perhaps desperate) attempt at re-introducing Rover cars to the North American market, but with different branding than the brutally unsuccessful Rover 3500 hatchback sedan from 1980. Based on the same platform as the acclaimed Acura Legend, the Sterling featured an angular exterior design and an interior with traditional British luxury cues, such as Connolly leather seats and burled walnut trim. On the exterior, only the door handles were obviously shared between the Acura and the Sterling.

A Honda-built 151 bhp 2.5 liter/152 ci V6 with fuel injection combined with a five-speed manual transmission yielded mpg ratings of 18 city /24 highway by the day’s standards (16/22 by modern standards). The optional four-speed automatic transmission dropped mpg incrementally to 17 city/23 highway. With the standard powertrain and an 18-gallon gas tank, a Sterling driver could expect a 310 to 340 mile range with a 10% fuel reserve.

Equipment, Reception, & Production Numbers

The $19,200 (about $55,300 in today’s dollars or about what a loaded 2025 Acura TLX sedan goes for) 825 S came with remote locking, power rack-and-pinion steering, power brakes, and 195/65R15 tires (a size still readily available) on 15-inch alloy wheels. Inside, air conditioning, power windows, an electric moonroof, cruise control, velour cloth seats, and a Phillips AM/FM stereo cassette with six speakers were all included.

Moving up to the $23,900 (about $68,800 in 2025 dollars) 825 SL added a four-speed automatic transmission, Bosch anti-lock brakes, Deluxe alloy wheels, a 10-function trip computer, leather upholstery with a heated driver’s seat, and an eight-speaker stereo.

Advertised as “The inevitable British road car.” Sterling sold 14,171 units of the 825 in the 1987 model year—not a bad debut. But, trouble was brewing; in an attempt to generate more jobs in the United Kingdom, Rover had decided to use Lucas electronic systems instead of those from Honda. Predictably, those electronics weren’t reliable, and there were also issues with the interior plastics and the exterior paint. Finally, rust came much too quickly.

All this meant that sales dropped rapidly. In 1988, only 8,901 were sold, and every year following that, things got worse. In August 1991, Sterling announced they were leaving the North American market after selling a total of about 35,000 cars over five years.

The View From 2025

The Sterling 825 rarely comes up for sale in the Hemmings Motor News classifieds or on eBay Motors. However, as I update this post in early 2025, there’s a 1988 825 SL on Bring a Trailer. I haven’t seen one in person in many years, but I believe I’d still notice that handsome styling if I did.

Make mine Pulsar, I think.

Last updated March 2025.

One thought on “1987 Sterling 825 sedan

  1. “in an attempt to generate more jobs in the United Kingdom, Rover had decided to use Lucas electronic systems instead of those from Honda. Predictably, those electronics weren’t reliable,”

    The Prince of Darkness strikes again!

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