← All McLaren 750S trims
Supercar2024

McLaren 750S
750S Coupe

720S successor — lighter, more powerful, faster.

Top Speed
206mph
0–60 mph
2.7s
Horsepower
740hp
Price
$328K
00 / History

The story of this car

Researching McLaren 750S 750S Coupe

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01 / This trim

What makes this trim its own car

Position in the lineup
Entry / base trim
  • Most power in the lineup: 740 hp.
  • Quickest 0–60 of any trim at 2.7s.
  • Highest top speed of the range — 206 mph.
  • Cheapest way into the model at $328K.
  • Lightest variant at 3,062 lb.
  • Only trim with the 7-speed ssg dual-clutch.
Ideal buyer
Who this trim is for

Someone who wants into a McLaren 750S without paying for the headline numbers. Day-to-day driving is identical to the more expensive trims 90% of the time — you keep the looks, the interior, and most of the tech, and you spend the difference on tires, insurance and fuel.

Probably not for

Track-day regulars and badge-conscious buyers — the higher trims earn their premium when the road gets twisty or the lights drop.

vs other trims
Delta sheet
vs 750S Spider
  • Price-$19K
  • Horsepowersame
  • 0–60-0.1s
  • Top speedsame
  • Weight-89 lb
02 / Mechanical

What's inside this trim

M.01
Engine / Powerplant

4.0L twin-turbo M840T V8

M.02
Peak Horsepower

740 hp

M.03
Drivetrain

RWD

M.04
Transmission

7-speed SSG dual-clutch

M.05
Curb Weight

3,062 lbs

M.06
Power-to-Weight

0.242 hp/lb · 4 lb per hp

M.07
Twin-Turbo V8

4.0L flat-plane crank V8 spins to 8,500 rpm.

M.08
Proactive Chassis Control III

Hydraulically linked dampers replace anti-roll bars.

M.09
7-Speed SSG

Seamless-shift dual-clutch gearbox.

03 / Features

What you actually get

Safety & driver assistance
  • Carbon MonoCage II-S
  • Carbon ceramic brakes
  • Stability control
  • Airbags
Performance hardware
  • Carbon-ceramic brake rotors
  • Launch control
  • Adaptive / magnetorheological dampers
  • Electronic limited-slip differential
  • Multiple drive modes (Comfort / Sport / Track)
Cabin & technology
  • Digital instrument cluster
  • Premium leather upholstery
  • Wireless Apple CarPlay & Android Auto
  • Bluetooth + smartphone integration
  • Premium audio system
  • Heated and cooled seats
04 / Maintenance

Keep it running for the long haul

The McLaren 750S is a hand-built machine running near its mechanical limits in every drive. Skipping a single oil interval shortens engine life dramatically; skipping a brake-fluid flush before a track day is genuinely dangerous. Stick religiously to the schedule below and use only McLaren-trained technicians.

Break-in (first 1,000–1,500 mi)

Most powertrain damage happens here. Do these right and the car will outlive its electronics.

  • First 600 mi: keep RPM below 5,000 and avoid full-throttle pulls. Vary RPM constantly — no cruise control.
  • Avoid highway-speed cruise for >30 min stretches; varied load helps the rings seat properly.
  • Do NOT change the factory-fill oil before 1,500 mi unless the manufacturer specifies otherwise — the oil contains break-in additives.
  • At 1,000–1,500 mi, perform the first oil change to remove metal break-in particles from ring/bearing seating.
  • Heat-cycle the brakes: 8–10 moderate stops from 60→10 mph in succession to bed the pads, then let them cool fully before any hard stop.
  • Drive at varied speeds for the first 200 mi — constant cruising glazes piston rings.
  • First 1,000 mi (DCT): drive in normal/automatic mode so the TCM learns clutch wear baseline. Avoid launch control.
IntervalTaskWhy it mattersPriority
WeeklyCold tire pressure checkSet to door-jamb spec when tires are cold. Underinflation kills sidewalls and fuel/range economy; overinflation reduces grip.High
WeeklyVisual walk-aroundCheck for fluid spots on the ground, tire condition, light operation, and any new noises before driving off.Recommended
MonthlyFluid level auditOpen the hood: check engine oil (where dipstick exists), coolant overflow level, brake fluid, washer fluid, power steering (if hydraulic).High
MonthlyWash + interior vacuumSalt, road tar and bird droppings etch paint and clearcoat. Use pH-neutral car shampoo, two-bucket method.Recommended
Every 6 monthsWax / ceramic top-upPaint protection prevents oxidation. Spray-on ceramic boosters extend a base coat for 6–9 months.Recommended
Every 12 monthsWiper blades + washer fluidReplace both blades; switch to winter blades + de-icer fluid in cold climates.Recommended
Every 12 months12V auxiliary battery testLoad-test the 12V battery — even EVs have one, and a weak 12V causes the most no-starts on modern cars.High
Every 24 monthsBrake fluid moisture testTest with a refractometer or strips. >2% water content = flush. Hygroscopic fluid corrodes ABS modulators.Critical
Every 24 monthsAlignment checkEven a curb hit can throw alignment off. Mis-alignment burns through $1k+ tire sets quickly.High
Every 5,000 mi / 6 monthsFull-synthetic oil + filter (track-rated)High-output engines shear oil quickly. Use the OEM-specified viscosity (typically 0W-40 or 5W-40 for McLaren) and an OEM filter.Critical
After every track dayOil + filter changeSustained high RPM accelerates oil oxidation. Change within 500 mi of a track day regardless of life remaining.Critical
Every 30,000–60,000 miCoolant level + condition checkUse only the OEM-spec coolant (manufacturer-spec long-life). Mixing coolant types causes gelling and water-pump failure.High
Every 60,000 miCoolant flush + refillLong-life ≠ lifetime. Old coolant turns acidic and eats aluminum heads.High
Every 15,000 miEngine air filter + cabin filterRestricted intake hurts power and economy. Replace cabin filter sooner in pollen-heavy or urban areas.Recommended
Every 30,000 miIridium spark plugs (turbo-spec gap)Turbo engines run colder plugs with a tighter gap; check gap with a wire gauge before install. Anti-seize on threads.High
Every 60,000 miCharge-pipe + intercooler inspectionBoost leaks at silicone joints rob power. Inspect couplers and PCV system; clean intercooler core if oil-fouled.High
Every 60,000–80,000 miIntake valve walnut-blast (DI engines)Direct-injection engines (BMW N/B-series, VW/Audi TFSI, MB M270/M139, Ford EcoBoost) build hard carbon on intake valves. Walnut-shell blasting restores airflow.High
Every 100,000 miTiming chain / belt serviceMost modern engines use chains (inspect tensioner & guides); some Audi 2.0/3.0 TDI/TFSI use a belt that MUST be replaced on schedule — failure destroys the engine.Critical
Every 12 monthsBrake pad/rotor visual + caliper slide serviceLubricate caliper slide pins with high-temp grease. Replace pads at 3 mm; rotors at minimum thickness or when scored.Critical
Every 24 months / 30,000 miBrake fluid flush (DOT 4 or higher)Performance use: consider DOT 4 LV or a racing fluid (Castrol SRF, Motul RBF600) with dry boiling point >300 °C.Critical
Every 30,000 miSuspension bushing + ball-joint inspectionCheck control-arm bushings, sway-bar end links, tie-rod ends and ball joints for play. Worn bushings cause clunks and uneven tire wear.High
Every 50,000 miPower steering fluid (if hydraulic)Electric racks are sealed-for-life. Hydraulic systems need a fluid flush to prevent pump whine.Recommended
Every 30,000 mi7-speed SSG dual-clutch fluid + filterDual-clutch boxes (DCT) are sensitive — use ONLY the OEM-spec fluid (e.g. manufacturer-fill). Wrong fluid = catastrophic failure within months.Critical
Every 60,000 miClutch pack wear scanDealer-level scan tool reads clutch wear %; rebuild before slip damages mechatronic unit ($8k+).High
Every 50,000 miRear differential oilRWD diffs run hot — fresh GL-5 75W-90 prevents whine and pinion bearing failure.High
Every 7,500 miPerformance tire rotation + wear-depth auditHeavy / high-power cars (2,815 lb, 740 hp) shred rear tires fast. Cross-rotate fronts to opposite rear, keep all four within 2/32" depth.Critical
Every 12 monthsWheel alignment + corner-weight checkPerformance cars are alignment-sensitive; even a curb-strike puts toe out of spec. Corner-weighting matters for track use.High
Every 12 months / 10,000 miMcLaren annual: oil + brake fluid + diagnosticCarbon MonoCell chassis means corrosion is irrelevant, but the wet-clutch SSG gearbox and turbo cooling system need annual fluid checks.Critical
Every 5 yearsCoolant + airbag serviceMcLaren spec: coolant flush every 5 yr; airbag inspection by McLaren-approved tech only.High
Before storage (>30 days)Fuel stabilizer + battery tender + tire pressure +5 psiAdd Sta-Bil to a full tank, hook a smart tender to the 12V (and Level-1 charge any EV/PHEV), inflate tires +5 psi to prevent flat-spotting, leave windows cracked.High
Coming out of storagePre-flight inspectionCheck tire pressures, brake function (rotors will be surface-rusted — bed gently), fluid levels, and rodent damage in the engine bay and cabin air intake.High
Service milestones

What to expect at each major service stop.

1,000–1,500 mi
  • First oil + filter (break-in)
  • Re-torque wheels
  • TCM relearn (auto/DCT)
  • Multipoint inspection
15,000 mi
  • Oil + filter
  • Tire rotation
  • Engine + cabin air filter
  • Brake pad measurement
30,000 mi
  • DCT/PDK fluid + filter
  • Brake fluid flush
  • Spark plugs (turbo)
  • Rear diff oil
  • Suspension inspection
60,000 mi
  • Coolant flush
  • Brake pads + rotors (likely)
  • PCV / valve-cover gasket
  • Walnut-blast intake (DI turbo)
  • Power steering fluid (if hydraulic)
100,000 mi
  • Timing belt (if equipped) + water pump
  • Spark plugs (NA)
  • Transmission rebuild check
  • Motor mounts inspection
  • All accessory belts
150,000+ mi
  • Suspension overhaul
  • Fuel injector clean / replace
  • Catalytic converter health (O2 sensors)
  • AC condenser + compressor service
Fluid specs

Use only OEM-approved fluids. Wrong fluid = catastrophic gearbox / engine damage.

FluidSpec / Approved TypeCapacity
Engine oil0W-40 full-synthetic~8–10 qt
CoolantOEM long-life HOAT/OAT — do not mix types~2.5–3.5 gal
Brake fluidDOT 4 LV or racing fluid (Castrol SRF / Motul RBF600), dry boil >300 °C
DCT / PDK fluidOEM-spec DCT fluid only~7–9 qt
Longevity tips
  • Warm the engine fully (oil at 180°F+) before any spirited driving — cold metal under load wears 10× faster.
  • Run 93+ octane (98 RON) only. Detonation on lower octane permanently damages high-compression engines.
  • After hard driving (track, mountain pass, autobahn pulls), idle 30–60 s before shutdown so turbos cool and oil temps stabilize.
  • Store on a battery tender if driven less than once a week — modern ECUs draw heavy parasitic loads.
  • Address small issues immediately (squeaks, warning lights, fluid spots) — they compound into $5k+ repairs.
  • Keep a written service log — both for your own tracking and resale value (Carfax-style records add 5–10% at sale).
  • Use OEM-spec parts and fluids — aftermarket 'equivalents' often aren't, and brand-engineered specs exist for real reasons.
  • Replace tires as a complete set (or at minimum same axle) and never mix tire models on an AWD car — damages the center diff.
Brand-specific notes
  • McLaren's wet-clutch SSG gearbox is sealed but the cooler lines weep — annual inspection is critical.
  • Always cross-reference your VIN with the latest OEM TSBs and recalls — manufacturers fix common issues silently under warranty.
  • Use the manufacturer app or a third-party scan tool (BimmerLink, OBDeleven, Techstream, Forscan) to monitor adaptations and clear codes between services.
Sources
  • Manufacturer owner's manuals (recommended service intervals)
  • Manufacturer Technical Service Bulletins (TSBs) and recall data
  • Consumer Reports — Vehicle Reliability & Maintenance
  • Edmunds True Cost to Own — Maintenance Schedules
  • NHTSA — vehicle safety + recall data
  • FuelEconomy.gov — official MPG and ownership data
  • Forum repair databases (BimmerForums, Rennlist, MBWorld, MyTurboDiesel, GT-R Life, etc.)

Always cross-check with your owner's manual — manufacturer intervals and TSBs supersede generic guidance.

05 / Configurator

Build your own

Starting from
750S Coupe
$328K
Your build
McLaren 750S 750S Coupe
Base$328K
Total$328K