Skip to content
JCCS: The Japanese Classic Car Show Movement
JDM Culture

JCCS: The Japanese Classic Car Show Movement

2 min readBy Editorial Team
Last updated:Published:

JCCS is the largest annual gathering of vintage Japanese cars in North America. Since 2005, the show has driven the restoration culture for pre-1990 Japanese cars.

JCCS: Japanese Classic Car Show — The Restoration Movement

The Japanese Classic Car Show (JCCS) is the largest annual gathering of vintage Japanese cars in North America. Held every September in Long Beach, California since 2005, JCCS celebrates Japanese cars manufactured before 1990 — the era before the modern JDM scene as we now understand it. The show has become a pilgrimage for vintage Japanese car enthusiasts and a cultural touchstone for the broader appreciation of Japanese automotive heritage.

The Origin

JCCS was founded in 2005 by Koji Yamaguchi, a vintage Japanese car enthusiast and collector, as an alternative to general "import car" shows that often diluted the focus by including modern JDM cars and modified street cars. The original concept was simple: only Japanese cars manufactured before 1985 (later expanded to 1990) would be allowed.

Free JDM Car Parts & Accessories newsletter

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

What's Featured

Typical JCCS show participants include:

  • Datsun/Nissan: 240Z, 280Z, 510, Skyline KPGC10, Fairlady Z, etc.
  • Toyota: 2000GT, Celica, Corolla AE86, Crown, MR2, Supra A60, etc.
  • Honda: CRX, Civic Si, Accord, NSX (NA1 era), S600/S800, etc.
  • Mazda: RX-3, RX-7 SA22C, FB, FC3S, Cosmo, etc.
  • Mitsubishi: Galant GTO, Starion, Cordia, etc.
  • Subaru: GL/DL, RX, SVX, Justy, etc.

The Restoration Culture

JCCS has been instrumental in driving the restoration culture for vintage Japanese cars. Before JCCS, vintage Japanese cars were often considered "throwaway" vehicles — driven hard and discarded. JCCS proved there was a serious enthusiast market for restored, original-condition vintage Japanese cars.

This cultural shift has influenced:

  • Restoration shops: Specialty restoration shops for vintage Japanese cars have emerged
  • Parts availability: NOS and reproduction parts have become more available
  • Auction values: Vintage Japanese cars now command premium prices at major auctions
  • Collector recognition: Bring a Trailer and other auction sites now feature vintage Japanese cars prominently

Cultural Significance

JCCS represents a counterpoint to the modern modified JDM scene. While modern JDM culture celebrates tuning, body kits, and aggressive modifications, JCCS celebrates preservation and restoration. The two cultures coexist but with different aesthetic principles.

For vintage Japanese car owners, JCCS is the venue where their cars are most appreciated. For broader JDM culture, JCCS proves that the appreciation extends beyond modern performance cars to include the entire Japanese automotive heritage.

Legacy

The Japanese Classic Car Show is the most important annual gathering of vintage Japanese cars in North America. Its 19+ year history (as of 2024) has helped establish vintage Japanese cars as legitimate collector vehicles worthy of preservation and restoration. Without JCCS, the appreciation for pre-1985 Japanese cars would be significantly weaker.

For JDM heritage enthusiasts, JCCS is essential. It's the cultural validation that Japanese automotive history matters as much as the modern tuning era.

Affiliate Disclosure

This article may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase through these links, we may earn a commission at no additional cost to you.
#motorsport
#jccs
#vintage
#classic
#show
#restoration
#heritage
🚗

Free Download

JDM Import Checklist

Step-by-step guide to importing a JDM vehicle: 25-year rule timelines, EPA/DOT compliance, shipping costs, and trusted importers list.

Save thousands on your import

Get Free Checklist
Newsletter

Stay in the Loop

Get the latest JDM Car Parts & Accessories reviews, deals, and expert tips delivered straight to your inbox.

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime. Privacy Policy

More Articles