Sway Bars for Autocross

Sway bars (anti-roll bars) are one of the best handling upgrades per dollar for autocross. They control body roll in cornering, shift the balance of the car front-to-rear, and respond quickly — exactly what autocross demands. A stiffer rear bar reduces understeer and makes the car rotate more eagerly. A stiffer front bar does the opposite. Understanding this lever gives you real car balance control.

How Sway Bars Work

The sway bar connects the left and right suspension on an axle. When one side compresses (cornering), the bar twists and resists that compression, transferring some load to the other side. Stiffer bar = more roll resistance = more lateral load transfer on that axle.

More lateral load transfer on an axle reduces that axle's grip (because one tire is getting overloaded while the other unloads). So:

Most stock cars are understeery (safe for everyday driving). Most autocross setups want a more neutral or mildly oversteery balance, so the typical first move is stiffening the rear bar relative to the front.

Adjustable vs Fixed Bars

Aftermarket sway bars come in two types:

With an adjustable bar, you can tune balance between events — or even between morning and afternoon runs if you carry a wrench.

Class Legality

Like coilovers, sway bar rules depend on your SCCA class:

Sway Bar Picks

Best Overall — ND Miata Editor's Pick
Whiteline Front and Rear Sway Bar Kit (ND MX-5)
Adjustable 3-position bars front and rear. The go-to upgrade for STR Miatas. Transforms the car's balance and eliminates the stock understeer. Includes upgraded end links.
~$350–$500Whiteline / Summit
Check Price →
Best for GR86/BRZ
Perrin Performance Front + Rear Sway Bar
Adjustable, hollow, fits GR86, BRZ, and FR-S. Popular for STX class builds. Good quality at a competitive price. Available as front-only or matched set.
~$300–$450Perrin
Check Price →
Best for WRX/STI
Cusco Front + Rear Sway Bar (VA/VB WRX)
Adjustable, high-quality Japanese manufacture. Tunes the AWD balance effectively. Common choice for STX WRX builds.
~$400–$600Cusco / dealers
Check Price →

Stiffer bars transmit more force through the end links. Stock rubber end links often flex under the higher loads, reducing the effective stiffness of your bar and adding slop to the response. Upgrade to adjustable pillow-ball or poly-bushed end links when you install aftermarket bars. Many bar kits include them — verify before ordering separately.

Start with the rear bar

If you're buying one bar, buy the rear. Most cars understeer at stock — stiffening the rear bar is the most common first suspension adjustment and typically improves lap times immediately. Front bar upgrades can create push if the rear isn't also addressed.