Liberty Walk’s body kit for the Lamborghini Countach is the most impressive tuning project so far in 2024. The amazing package turns this iconic 1980s icon into a sort of JDM Super Silhouette race car.
Everybody was impressed by the Liberty Walk Countach when it made its debut at the 2024 Tokyo Auto Salon. However, one very important piece of information remains a mystery until today: the price. It’s not officially available. However, we’ve managed to obtain basic pricing information for the LB-Works Lamborghini Countach from a secondary official website, and it starts from $42,350.
We honestly expected it to be way more expensive. The Countach they used for the project is worth a fortune by comparison, and everybody was basing their estimates on the LB-Works Ferrari F40 from 2023, which starts at $127,600 (for the kit).
So what do you get for $42,350? Well, the kit consists of Liberty Walk front and rear bumpers, a front diffuser, front racing canards, side skirts, side diffusers, a rear wing, and a roof-mounted air intake. What’s not included is fabrication, which includes cutting into a priceless Lamborghini, or the air suspension and wheels needed to pull off the look. They used Rohana Forged for the Tokyo show car, and it also has a racing exhaust, Sparko seats with a 5-point harness, and other cool stuff.
To install the kit, Liberty Walk has to cut off the factory fender sections which flare out, and the bolt on their own widebody. They also remove the rear bumper to install the diffuser. Meanwhile, the front bumper is designed after the Counch’s successor, the Diablo.
You might not think it, but Jaman is the Mecca of custom Lamborghinis. Of course, Liberty Walk is also the biggest supplier of Lamborghini body kits in the world, having completely re-engineered the Huracan and Aventador. So it makes sense for them to develop a Countach.
The car they used is pretty interesting as well. Before the body kit was installed, Liberty Walk’s car used to be a bright red Countach 25th Anniversary. This was the last iteration of the iconic supercar, produced in 1988 and 1989 by the Sant’Agata Bolognese.
The Anniversario’s look is the most extreme stock version of the car, immediately recognizable by its bodywork which was redesigned by Horacio Pagani. It had larger side skirts and front bumper, and the famous louvers in the rear vents. Liberty Walk’s car has a single central bulge on the engine cover like a Euro version, which was carbureted. But it’s not uncommon for US spec cars to be converted. Either way, the average value of this race Countach (657 built) is about $600,000.