Acura MDX Production Moves North; Acura Is As Much of an Ohio Car Brand As Can Be

Timothy Cain
by Timothy Cain

With production of the three-row Acura MDX joining the Acura RDX at American Honda’s East Liberty Auto Plant in East Liberty, Ohio, Acura has become a profoundly Buckeyed automobile brand.

Still stealing some production space at Honda’s Lincoln, Alabama assembly plant where the Honda Pilot, Honda Ridgeline, and 2018 Honda Odyssey are also built, production of the MDX has shifted to Ohio in order to free up capacity for both Honda’s and Acura’s top-selling model.

As a result of the MDX’s relocation, Acura now builds five of its six models in the state of Ohio.

And the one Acura that doesn’t hail from Ohio? That’d be the RLX, which forms less than 1 percent of the Acura brand’s volume.

Also assembled in the East Liberty plant is Acura’s second-best-selling model, the RDX two-row crossover. Combined, the two utility vehicles account for nearly two-thirds of Acura’s U.S. volume.

American Honda’s East Liberty factory is a utility vehicle haven. The Honda CR-V, America’s top-selling SUV/crossover in each of the last five years, is also produced in East Liberty, Ohio, albeit not exclusively.

Nine miles away at Honda’s Marysville assembly plant, Acura builds its two core sedans: the ILX and more popular TLX. Acura revamped the TLX for the 2018 model year. The ILX continues on the ninth-generation Civic’s platform, nearly two years into the tenth-generation Civic’s tenure.

Also in Marysville, Ohio, Acura builds the NSX at the Performance Manufacturing Center. Roughly 100 NSXs are assembled in Ohio each month.

The oft forgotten RLX sedan, the brand’s flagship in a sense, is the lone import in Acura’s U.S. lineup. Acura is barely managing to sell more than 100 RLXs per month in the United States.

Five-sixths of Acura’s U.S. lineup is thus Ohio-derived. But in one of Acura’s few other markets, China, the Honda HR-V-based Acura CDX is assembled in Guangzhou, China. There’s still no official announcement that would cause the CDX to make its way across the Pacific, but American Honda’s Acura vice president, Jon Ikeda, says, “We have our R&D guys looking into the possibility.”

That leaves Ohio-built nameplates as the foundation for 99 percent of Acura’s sales in the brand’s largest market.

Go Buckeyes.

Timothy Cain is a contributing analyst at The Truth About Cars and Autofocus.ca and the founder and former editor of GoodCarBadCar.net. Follow on Twitter @timcaincars.

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  • Jkross22 When I think about products that I buy that are of the highest quality or are of great value, I have no idea if they are made as a whole or in parts by unionized employees. As a customer, that's really all I care about. When I think about services I receive from unionized and non-unionized employees, it varies from C- to F levels of service. Will unionizing make the cars better or worse?
  • Namesakeone I think it's the age old conundrum: Every company (or industry) wants every other one to pay its workers well; well-paid workers make great customers. But nobody wants to pay their own workers well; that would eat into profits. So instead of what Henry Ford (the first) did over a century ago, we will have a lot of companies copying Nike in the 1980s: third-world employees (with a few highly-paid celebrity athlete endorsers) selling overpriced products to upper-middle-class Americans (with a few urban street youths willing to literally kill for that product), until there are no more upper-middle-class Americans left.
  • ToolGuy I was challenged by Tim's incisive opinion, but thankfully Jeff's multiple vanilla truisms have set me straight. Or something. 😉
  • ChristianWimmer The body kit modifications ruined it for me.
  • ToolGuy "I have my stance -- I won't prejudice the commentariat by sharing it."• Like Tim, I have my opinion and it is perfect and above reproach (as long as I keep it to myself). I would hate to share it with the world and risk having someone critique it. LOL.
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