The Honda Civic Type R FL5 is the best handling Type R Honda has built, backed by a 7:44.88 Nürburgring front-wheel-drive lap record, razor-sharp steering and a track-focused chassis as standard. It is already more capable than most roads it lives on, so modifying is about tailoring it to how you drive, whether that is a softer ride on rough UK tarmac, faster lap times or sharper response on a B-road. This guide covers the FL5 handling mods that actually make a difference across suspension, chassis stiffening, brakes and wheels.

Quick Verdict
Start with Spoon Sports Progressive Lowering Springs on the factory dampers for the best value handling gain. Daily-focused owners should fit the Honda Integra DE5 ADS Module for a more compliant ride, while track builds want a full Spoon Sports, Öhlins or KW coilover kit. Tie the chassis together with Spoon Sports Rigid Subframe Collars, upgrade to Dixcel Z Type brake pads and drop unsprung weight with a lighter wheel from Enkei or similar.
1. Suspension Upgrades
The FL5's factory adaptive dampers are genuinely good, so suspension work is about refinement and adjustability, not rescuing a poor setup. The right path depends on use. Daily drivers on rough UK roads want more compliance without losing control. Track cars want full adjustability.
| Option | Best For | Adjustability | Price Point |
|---|---|---|---|
| Honda Integra DE5 ADS Module | Daily comfort on rough roads | Reversible to OEM, works with drive modes | ££ |
| Spoon Sports Progressive Lowering Springs | Best value sharper handling | Fixed 20mm drop, pairs with stock dampers | ££ |
| Spoon Sports / Öhlins / KW Coilovers | Road and track, full control | Damping, ride height and geometry | ££££ |
Honda Integra DE5 ADS Module: the Adaptive Damping System module from the Integra Type S softens the FL5 just enough for daily use on poor tarmac without losing control. Fully reversible to OEM for track days and still works with the car's drive modes. Counterintuitive on paper, but owner feedback has been strong.
Spoon Sports Progressive Lowering Springs: the classic low cost first step done right. A 20mm drop lowers the centre of gravity, cuts body roll and sharpens steering, pairing perfectly with the high quality factory dampers. The best balance of cost, ride quality and handling gain on the FL5.
Spoon Sports, Öhlins and KW Coilovers: the full setup. The Spoon kit was developed through endurance racing including the 25 Hours of Thunderhill and built with KW, blending race durability with precise engineering. Full damping, ride height and geometry adjustment to fine-tune for any circuit or road.
Torque GT Take
Spoon springs on the stock dampers are the best handling value on the FL5 and the sweet spot for daily drivers. For regular track use go straight to coilovers. If comfort is the priority, look hard at the DE5 module.
2. Chassis Stiffening Mods
The FL5 chassis is stiff from the factory but there is still flex to remove, and it pays off the moment you add grip or power. Chassis stiffening is some of the most cost-effective handling work you can do, sharpening turn-in and making the car more predictable when pushed.
| Upgrade | Best For | What It Does | Price Point |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spoon Sports Rigid Subframe Collars | Best value stability gain | Tightens chassis to subframe, cuts flex | £ |
| Spoon Sports Front Stiff Plate | Power or high-grip builds | Adds front-end rigidity | ££ |
| Spoon Sports Anti-Roll Bars | Fine-tuning balance | Stiffer than stock, two-way adjustable | ££ |
Spoon Sports Rigid Subframe Collars: one of the most cost-effective FL5 upgrades. They tighten the chassis to subframe connection to cut flex, giving less steering correction over bumps, more predictable response and greater confidence when pushing on.
Spoon Sports Front Stiff Plate: a simple bolt-on that adds front-end rigidity, essential once the FL5 has more power or higher grip tyres loading the chassis.
Spoon Sports Anti-Roll Bars: significantly stiffer than stock and two-way adjustable, so you can dial in balance for road or track rather than living with one fixed setting.
Torque GT Take
Fit Rigid Collars on every FL5, they are cheap and you feel the difference straight away. Add the front stiff plate and adjustable anti-roll bars once you are chasing grip or lap times. These parts were designed to win races, so they earn their place on a serious build.
3. Brake Upgrades
The FL5's Brembo four-pot calipers already give serious stopping power, so the smart first move is pads, not a big-brake kit. The right compound transforms cold bite, temperature range and feedback for road and track without touching the hardware. It is the cheapest meaningful handling upgrade on the car.
| Pad | Best For | Cold Bite | Fade Resistance | Price Point |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dixcel Z Type | Spirited road and light track | Strong from cold | High across a wide range | ££ |
| Spoon Sports Street | Road-focused Spoon builds | Good | Good | ££ |
| Spoon Sports Circuit | Dedicated track use | Builds with heat | Very high | £££ |
Dixcel Z Type: the Torque GT recommendation for the FL5. Strong cold bite, a wide temperature range and consistent feedback for spirited road use, with no fade under repeated hard stops on track. Try them once and you will not go back.
Spoon Sports Street: for owners building a full Spoon car who want road manners with a performance edge. Daily friendly but holds up to harder use.
Spoon Sports Circuit: a track-focused compound for FL5s seeing regular circuit time, with a higher operating temperature and serious fade resistance under sustained hard driving.
Torque GT Take
Dixcel Z Type is the pad to fit for most FL5 owners, covering road and light track use without compromise. Only move to the Spoon Sports Circuit pad for regular hard track sessions.
4. Lightweight Wheels
The factory 19-inch FL5 wheels look aggressive but weigh 12.1kg each and limit tyre choice. Dropping to an 18-inch wheel with a chunkier tyre improves ride comfort, tyre compliance and rubber options. Losing unsprung weight is one of the most effective handling and response gains you can make.
| Wheel | Best For | Construction | Price Point |
|---|---|---|---|
| Enkei RPF1 | Best value weight saving | MAT flow-formed | ££ |
| Spoon Sports Wheels | Full Spoon builds | Lightweight cast / forged | £££ |
| RAYS | Premium forged choice | Forged | ££££ |
Enkei RPF1: the value benchmark for shedding unsprung weight. An 18-inch RPF1 is around four kilos lighter per corner than the 12.1kg OEM wheel, benefiting acceleration and steering response. Flow-formed strength at a sensible price.
Spoon Sports Wheels: the natural fit for a full Spoon build, combining light weight with the brand's motorsport pedigree and styling.
RAYS: the forged option for the lowest weight and strongest construction, and the benchmark for serious track wheels.
The most versatile 18-inch setup is a 9.5" wide wheel with a 40 to 45 offset and a 265/35 tyre, which keeps plenty of tyre choice even when lowered slightly.
Torque GT Take
The Enkei RPF1 is the smart-money pick for most FL5 owners, lighter than OEM and track proven. Step up to RAYS forged wheels if weight and strength are the priority. We stock Enkei, Spoon, Mugen and RAYS to suit any build.
FL5 Handling Build Path
| Tier | Core Upgrades | Supporting Upgrades | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fast Road | Spoon Progressive Lowering Springs, Dixcel Z Type pads | Rigid Subframe Collars | Biggest gain for the money, keeps daily comfort |
| Performance Road | Spoon / Öhlins / KW coilovers, Enkei RPF1 18-inch wheels | Front stiff plate, adjustable anti-roll bars | Sharper response, full ride height and damping control |
| Road and Track | Full coilover kit, Spoon Circuit pads, RAYS forged wheels | Full chassis bracing, geometry setup | DE5 module available for OEM comfort when not on track |
FL5 Handling Mods FAQ
What is the best first handling mod for the Honda Civic Type R FL5?
The best first handling mod for the FL5 is a set of Spoon Sports Progressive Lowering Springs on the factory dampers. They drop ride height by 20mm to lower the centre of gravity, cut body roll and sharpen steering for a low cost while keeping the high quality stock damping.
Do I need coilovers on the FL5 or are springs enough?
For road use lowering springs are enough on the FL5 because the factory adaptive dampers are genuinely good. Coilovers from Spoon Sports, Öhlins or KW make sense once you want full adjustability in damping, ride height and geometry for regular track use.
Can you make the FL5 ride more comfortably on UK roads?
Yes. Fitting the Honda Integra DE5 ADS module softens the FL5's adaptive damping just enough for rough UK tarmac without losing control. It is a reversible swap that still works with the car's drive modes, so you can return to the stiffer OEM setting for track days.
Are Spoon Sports Rigid Collars worth it on the FL5?
Yes. Spoon Sports Rigid Subframe Collars are one of the most cost-effective FL5 handling upgrades. They tighten the chassis to subframe connection to reduce flex, which means less steering correction over bumps and a more predictable, planted feel.
What are the best brake pads for the Honda Civic Type R FL5?
The best all-round brake pads for the FL5 are Dixcel Z Type, which offer strong cold bite, a wide temperature range and consistent feedback for road and light track use. For dedicated track work the Spoon Sports Circuit pad offers higher fade resistance.
Should I fit smaller wheels to the FL5 for handling?
Moving from the 19-inch OEM wheels to a lighter 18-inch wheel improves ride comfort, tyre compliance and tyre choice on the FL5. An 18-inch Enkei RPF1 saves around four kilos per corner over the 12.1kg factory wheel, which sharpens acceleration and steering response. A 9.5" wide wheel with a 40 to 45 offset and a 265/35 tyre is the most versatile setup.







