The Australian-developed Mitsubishi Triton Raiderhas been announced as a more off-road-capable version of the Ford Ranger and Toyota HiLux rivalling ute, with first arrivals expected in May as part of a wider Triton model-year update.
The Triton Raider is a new model grade arriving with the model year 2026 (MY26) update, with the core lineup also benefiting from retuned front and rear suspension, while the number of manual transmission variants has been reduced to one.
The rally-inspired Triton Raider is based on the MY26 GSR dual-cab, which also gains Mitsubishi Connect services as part of its update, and comes with a black sports bar, roof rails and 18-inch alloy wheels.
The Raider goes significantly further, adding unique local suspension and steering upgrades from Melbourne-based Premcar, which Mitsubishi Australia says gives the Triton range a proper showroom off-road competitor.
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“Looking at the volume in that $60,000-plus price range where we haven’t really been, the Raider was really born to create that emotional derivative,” Bruce Hampel, Mitsubishi Australia’s general manager of product strategy, told CarExpert.
Pricing hasn’t been announced, but Mitsubishi has confirmed the Raider will sit above the MY26 Triton GSR’s $65,590 (before on-road costs) price – and it could push beyond $70,000.
Mr Hampel said the Raider is a showroom competitor to the Ford Ranger Tremor, which in updated ‘2026.5’ form – due in showrooms mid-year – is priced at $75,090 before on-road costs.
The upcoming Nissan Navara Warrior was also singled out as a Triton Raider rival – understandable, considering the new-generation Navara is a twin to the Triton.
While the new-generation Warrior has yet to be priced, the previous model was listed at $75,643 before on-road costs.
While the broader Navara range also benefits from steering and suspension tuning by Premcar, the Raider’s upgrades go significantly further.
The changes reflect the Raider name, which was chosen as a nod to the off-road rally raids the Triton has competed in, including the Asia Cross Country Rally it won in 2025.
The beefed-up Triton Raider starts with the GSR’s graphite front grille, sports bar and roof rails, but swaps its 18 x 7.5-inch alloy wheels for wider 18 x 9.0-inch items from ROH.
Finished in a unique Brushed Bronze colour with Raider-branded centre caps, the wheels feature a unique offset to increase track width by 20mm, and are wrapped in 285/60 Bridgestone Dueler A/T 002 all-terrain tyres.

Premcar engineering director Andrew Lynch said the chassis tuning was centred around the Bridgestone tyres, which were selected after evaluating multiple options against 20 key attributes.
Work then shifted to the front suspension, where taller coil springs with revised rates balance ride comfort on- and off-road, along with increased jounce travel to better absorb impacts.
The dampers feature larger pistons and increased oil capacity, allowing them to remain cooler for longer under heavy loads, including sustained off-road driving or towing.
Mr Lynch said the Raider’s dampers have their own unique ‘valve code’, meaning they’re specifically tuned to match the recalibrated steering and upgraded wheel-and-tyre package.
According to Mitsubishi, 7000km of outback testing was completed to finalise the Raider’s tune.
Combined, the changes add 25mm to the front ride height and 15mm to the rear, while a front sump protector forms part of the relatively subtle exterior updates.
Other visual changes include ‘sandstorm’ side decals and Raider tailgate badging, while the cabin remains largely unchanged from the GSR, aside from Raider embroidery on the front headrests and a centre console badge.
There are no changes to the 150kW/470Nm 2.4-litre four-cylinder turbo-diesel engine, six-speed automatic transmission or four-wheel drive system.

Mitsubishi hasn’t confirmed exact figures, but doesn’t expect changes to the Triton GSR’s 3500kg braked towing capacity or circa 970kg payload.
The current-generation Triton was introduced in 2023, with the Nissan Navara launched in 2026 as a restyled version of the Triton, albeit with its own Premcar-tuned suspension to further differentiate the two utes.
Both automakers are part of the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi Alliance, with some models and components shared across the brands.

