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TUNE Updated 2026-05-14

This guide covers the drift tuning fundamentals that carry forward from Forza Horizon 5 into Forza Horizon 6 (launching 2026-05-19, five days from today’s date of 2026-05-14). Instead of one-size-fits-all tune codes, it explains the working ranges every community tuner agrees on — tire pressure, suspension stiffness, camber, toe, caster, and differential lock — plus how to adjust them for your driving style and car. Pair this with car-specific tunes from HokiHoshi or Don Joewon Song once you understand the why behind each number.

Key Facts

SettingValue
Applies toFH5 methodology, carries to FH6 — tuning UI is unchanged at launch — unconfirmed as of May 2026
Differential accel100% (drop to 95–98% on 600+ HP cars)
Differential decel100% (some tuners prefer 0–5%)
Front camber-3 to -5 degrees
Rear camber0 to -0.5 degrees
Front toe+1.0 (up to +1.5 for sharper turn-in)
Rear toe-0.5 to -0.2 degrees
Front caster6 to 7 degrees (7 is the common sweet spot)
Front tire pressure28–32 PSI
Rear tire pressure25–28 PSI
Front springsStock or slightly stiffer
Rear springsSlightly softer than stock
Front ARBStock baseline
Rear ARBA few clicks softer than front
Ride heightAs low as possible without bottoming out
Tire compoundDrift compound (not race tires)
DrivetrainRWD preferred for drifting

Differential: The Most Important Drift Setting

The differential is where every drift tune starts. A locked rear differential forces both rear wheels to spin together, which is what makes the rear axle break traction predictably instead of one wheel gripping and snapping the car straight.

The consensus baseline across community tuners is:

SettingValueNotes
Acceleration100%Drop to 95–98% on 600+ HP cars to avoid overspin
Deceleration100%Some prefer 0–5% for a freer entry; preference-driven

Drifted’s Joe Terrell states the rule plainly: “Acceleration: 100%” and “Deceleration: 100%” to lock the rear wheels together. The official Forza Drift Community forum guide adds the methodology: “The more acceleration and deceleration, the more angle you will be able to achieve while drifting.”

An alternative school — represented by the forum guide from Driftin_Ebisu — runs “Diff. 60% accel, 0–5% decel, preference,” which keeps the car more agile on transitions at the cost of holding angle. Start at 100/100, then pull deceleration down only if the car feels nailed-down on entry.

Suspension Stiffness, Springs and Anti-Roll Bars

Drift suspension is about controlled weight transfer to the rear, not lap-time stiffness. The general rule from APX_Walker’s forum guide: “The tighter you make your Suspension, the less weight will transfer to the sides of your car while drifting. The softer you make the Suspension, the more weight will transfer to the sides of your car while drifting.”

Working starting points (Drifted, 2025):

ComponentFrontRear
SpringsStock or slightly stifferSlightly softer than stock
Anti-roll barStockA few clicks softer than front
Ride heightMinimumMinimum (don’t bottom out)

The softer rear is intentional — it lets the rear squat under throttle, plant the rear tires, and rotate. Dampers are typically left near default until you can feel a specific problem (bounce on entry = soften rebound, slow weight transfer = stiffen bump).

Camber, Toe and Caster Alignment

Alignment controls how the tires meet the road during big slip angles. The drift convention is heavy negative front camber (the outside-front tire is the one doing the work mid-drift) and near-zero rear camber so the rear contact patch stays wide for grip and traction recovery.

SettingFrontRear
Camber-3 to -5 deg0 to -0.5 deg
Toe+1.0 to +1.5 deg-0.5 to -0.2 deg
Caster6 to 7 degn/a

Drifted recommends “Front Camber: -5deg” with “-3 to -4deg” if grip feels lacking, and “Rear Camber: 0deg to -0.5deg.” APX_Walker’s forum guide echoes “the front camber will generally be anywhere from -4 to -5 and the rear will generally be from -1 to -2” for an older but still common school.

Front toe-out (positive) sharpens turn-in and gives more steering bite at angle. Drifted: “Toe Front: 1.0deg” with “1.5deg” for more aggression. Rear toe-in (negative) stabilizes the rear during transitions: “Toe Rear: -0.5deg” with “-0.2deg” for a more responsive rear.

Caster increases self-centering steering and effective lock angle. Drifted and Driftin_Ebisu agree: “Front Caster: 7deg” is the sweet spot; “Caster: 6–7, universally.”

Tire Pressure and Compound

Drift tunes deliberately reduce rear grip. The two levers are compound (always pick the drift tire upgrade, not race tires) and pressure.

Higher pressure shrinks the contact patch and reduces grip; lower pressure widens it. Drifted’s working ranges:

  • Front: 28–32 PSI — keep moderate for steering feel.
  • Rear: 25 PSI starting point — run lower if you want more rear grip for big-angle holds; run higher to make the rear break away easier.

The forum guide from APX_Walker offers the classic neutral baseline: “It’s generally accepted that optimal tire grip is achieved at 32psi” and “Set your front and rear tire pressure to 28psi and take your car out on your favorite track,” then adjust from there. Driftin_Ebisu summarizes the directional rule: “More PSI = less grippy tire, really use this for the fronts.”

Don’t chase a magic PSI — change one variable at a time, drive two or three laps of a familiar drift zone, and feel where the rear lets go.

Tuning Methodology: How to Iterate

A drift tune is never finished on the first pass. Use this loop:

  1. Build the car first. RWD conversion if needed, drift tires, race transmission, race differential. The forum advice is unanimous — tuning a stock-diff car for drift is a waste of time.
  2. Set the differential to 100/100 before anything else.
  3. Set alignment to the ranges in the table above. Start at the middle of each range.
  4. Tire pressure last — this is your fine-tune knob.
  5. Drive one familiar zone (e.g. Mulege drift zone in FH5). Change one setting at a time.
  6. If the rear is too grippy: raise rear PSI, add a touch of rear camber, or soften the rear ARB.
  7. If the rear is too loose: lower rear PSI, reduce rear camber toward 0, stiffen the rear ARB slightly.
  8. If the car won’t transition: stiffen front springs slightly or add front toe.

For curated car-specific tunes once you understand the variables, the two most-followed creators in the community are HokiHoshi and Don Joewon Song on YouTube — both have full drift-tuning playlists going back through FH4 and FH5.

Comparison: Grip-Leaning vs Slide-Leaning Drift Tune

SettingGrip-leaning drift tuneSlide-leaning drift tune
Differential accel/decel100% / 100%100% / 0–5%
Front camber-3 deg-5 deg
Rear camber0 deg-0.5 deg
Front toe+1.0 deg+1.5 deg
Rear toe-0.2 deg-0.5 deg
Rear tire pressure22–25 PSI28–32 PSI
Rear ARBCloser to frontSeveral clicks softer

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best differential setting for drifting in Forza Horizon?

Set the rear differential to 100% acceleration and 100% deceleration as a baseline. On very high-horsepower cars (600+ HP), drop acceleration to 95–98% to control wheelspin.

What camber should I run for drift in Forza?

Front camber between -3 and -5 degrees, rear camber between 0 and -0.5 degrees. More negative front camber gives the outside-front tire a bigger contact patch at angle; near-zero rear camber keeps the rear stable.

What tire pressure is best for drifting?

Start at 28–32 PSI front and around 25 PSI rear. Raise rear PSI if the rear feels too grippy; lower it if the rear breaks away unpredictably.

Should I use race tires or drift tires for drift builds?

Always pick the drift tire compound — unconfirmed as of May 2026 whether this changes in FH6. Race tires have too much grip and make it hard to initiate and hold angle.

Do these drift tune basics work in Forza Horizon 6?

The tuning UI and physics are expected to carry over from FH5, so the same ranges apply at FH6’s May 19, 2026 launch — unconfirmed as of May 2026. This page will be updated with FH6-specific values after community testing.

Who are the best tuners to follow for drift tunes?

HokiHoshi and Don Joewon Song are the two most-followed Forza tuning creators on YouTube, both maintain drift-specific playlists across FH4, FH5 and Forza Motorsport.