Automotive
Koenigsegg has once again reminded the automotive world that when it comes to absurd speed, the Swedish hypercar builder still operates in rare air. According to details shared in the latest report, the Jesko Absolut recently set new production car speed records for both the quarter-mile and half-mile, posting numbers that sound almost unreal even by modern hypercar standards. The headline figure is an 8.54-second quarter-mile run at 190 mph, achieved by a rear-wheel-drive, street-tire-equipped production car on Koenigsegg’s former fighter-jet runway facility.
That is the kind of number that makes even other elite performance machines look ordinary. For perspective, the Jesko Absolut is crossing the quarter-mile at speeds where many fast cars are still working their way toward top-end acceleration. It also becomes the first production car to exceed 300 km/h in the quarter mile, with its 190-mph trap speed translating to roughly 305 km/h. The fact that it did this without all-wheel drive, without electric assist, and without a prepped dragstrip makes the achievement even more ridiculous.
The half-mile result is just as wild. Koenigsegg’s reported figures show the Jesko Absolut covering the distance in 12.76 seconds and traveling 232 mph by the end of the run. That is not simply quick acceleration off the line. That is relentless, high-speed pull from a car designed to minimize drag and keep building speed in a way few production vehicles can match. Koenigsegg has long said the Absolut was created as its ultimate low-drag top-speed machine, and these results make that mission very clear.
Helping make all of this possible is the Jesko Absolut’s twin-turbocharged V8, which in its most potent form is capable of enormous output while driving only the rear wheels. The car’s aero-focused body, slippery profile, and advanced transmission all play key roles, but what stands out most is how cleanly the Absolut continues accelerating once many other hypercars start to run out of breath. This is not just launch control theater. This is a car built to keep charging hard well past the speeds most owners will ever see.
Another fascinating part of the story is how Koenigsegg reportedly unlocked this latest performance through software. The company says the improvements will be delivered to the Jesko Absolut fleet through an over-the-air update, meaning existing owners could receive a meaningful performance upgrade without changing hardware. That is a very modern twist on old-school speed chasing, where a car already sitting in a collector’s garage can become even faster with a factory update.
Koenigsegg test driver Markus Lundh handled the record-setting runs, adding another chapter to the brand’s long history of chasing extreme speed with a mix of engineering obsession and confidence bordering on madness. At this level, the differences between records are measured in fractions of a second and single miles per hour, but the Jesko Absolut’s latest numbers are more than incremental. They are a statement. In a world increasingly filled with silent electric hypercars, Koenigsegg has shown that a combustion-powered, rear-drive machine can still deliver the kind of performance that leaves everyone else staring at the timing sheets.
Mike Floyd is a finance executive by trade and a car enthusiast at heart. As a CFO with a keen eye for detail and strategy, Mike brings his analytical mindset to the automotive world, uncovering fresh insights and unique perspectives that go beyond the surface. His passion for cars—especially his favorite, the Porsche 911, fuels his contributions to Automotive Addicts, where he blends a love for performance and design with his professional precision. Whether he’s breaking down industry trends or spotlighting emerging innovations, Mike helps keep the site both sharp and forward-thinking.
