2025 Lexus ES 350 F Sport Black Line First Test: Muscle Cruiser
Does the new Black Line Special Edition model move the needle for the ES in the luxury midsize sedan space?Pros
- Quiet, refined conveyance
- Decent efficiency and grunt for a V-6
- Not as pricey as many rivals
Cons
- Underperforming tires
- Unexciting at-limit dynamics
- Unimpressionable cabin
For the seventh-generation ES luxury midsize sedan’s possibly final model year, Lexus adds a new top V-6 gas-only grade called the Black Line Special Edition. If the trim sounds familiar, it might be because it was previously used for the 2021 model and came with similar upgrades. The Black Line is built on top of an ES 350 F Sport Handling that already boasts niceties like aluminum pedals, power-folding side mirrors, wireless phone charger, Intuitive Parking Assist, and distinctive F Sport body embellishments.
0:00 / 0:00
Although the carmaker hasn’t let a year go by without updating the ES, in the past we’ve accused the Lexus of being a staid sedan. How does the Black Line Special stack up against other ES 350 F Sport Handling models? How does it fare against its closest competitor?
Why Is the Black Line Edition Special?
The sedan is essentially the top non-hybrid ES this year. To the ES 350 F Sport Handling, the Black Line Special Edition adds a black trunklid spoiler, black rocker panel accents, and F Sport logo puddle lights, all of which we do not hate. Like the Ultra Luxury trim, a head-up display and the bigger 12.3-inch infotainment touchscreen come standard with the Black Line (up from an 8.0-inch center screen interface).
We appreciate the upgrades, because on some levels the ES seems due for even more significant modernization. Little about the luxury car cabin strikes us as all that contemporary. The analog clock on the dash and shift lever with perforated leather-wrapped knob protruding from the center console feel familiar but also look like they’re from a previous era. Even some of our 350’s most interesting tech—like the sliding gauge face in the cluster and available power rear window shade—aren’t all that impressive anymore.
That said, technological improvements over the years do help the car integrate into everyday life a little more readily. In over a week of heavy use, we had only one minor hiccup with the standard wireless Apple CarPlay. The ES’s blind-spot monitoring and Lexus Safety System+ 2.5 features all functioned as billed.






