If you look at the automotive landscape in 2026, a four-door family sedan with over 400 horsepower feels normal. We now live in an era where you can have your family car come standard with enough power to keep up with a Porsche 911 in a straight line. But the early 2000s weren't like this.
This article has been updated to explain why the car is still relevant today.
If you wanted to go fast, you bought a two-door coupe because it was built for that purpose. You had to make a compromise between fun and family. The only way to have both was to get a BMW M5 or an E55/E63 AMG, but they were stupidly expensive. Dodge had a great idea. It wanted to make a car of its own that would compete in this segment and be just as fast. What the team came up with was what looked like a sensible family car on the outside but had the soul, character and even the name of one of its most iconic muscle cars.
The Dodge Charger is one of the most iconic muscle cars in automotive history and when the 2000s came around, Dodge started teasing that it would bring back this nameplate and the automotive world was excited. It was last seen in 1987, but that car had lost the flare that made the original cars so famous. The next generation Charger made it into production in 2006 after an almost two-decade hiatus. But there was a problem with this new version; it was now a four-door sedan.
The Charger has always been a two-door and purists were not happy. This wasn't the Charger they knew. At first, it seemed they made this less of a muscle car and more of a family car. But the market had changed, Dodge wanted to appeal to a wider audience instead of just the older crowd.
It needed a fast four-door sedan you would want to use every day. This was a big gamble, but as we all know, it has paid off big time. It was the muscle car Dodge needed to kick off the modern era. It was also available with a variety of engines, from a base V6 to the big Hemi V8s, including the legendary SRT version.
The best way to experience the new Charger is to get the V8. The R/T version had the 5.7-liter V8 with 340 hp, which was respectable. Then there was the SRT-8 trim, which totally transformed the car. It quickly solidified the Charger as a genuine muscle car and helped prove that four-door cars didn't have to be boring.
Dodge didn't just put on a badge, make a few cosmetic changes and call it a day. The car was lowered by half an inch, used a hood scoop to feed more air into the engine, and featured bigger 20-inch forged aluminum wheels. Dodge also made other subtle exterior changes with the bumpers to make this a bit more aggressive.
The SRT-8 also had a bigger and more powerful engine than the R/T, the 6.1-liter Hemi V8. The engineers took the original 5.7 block and bored it out to 6.1 and upgraded the internals with a forged crankshaft, stronger connecting rods and increased compression ratio. The result was the most powerful Dodge Charger at the time with 425 hp and 420 lb-ft of torque.
This was a lot for this period, since the most powerful naturally aspirated Mustang of this generation made 315 hp. The Charger was in a different power bracket. It may have been a four-door, but it displayed its muscular characteristics very well. It didn't rely on turbos or fancy electronics to make power, just a big engine with raw power. This was a car you needed to respect, just like the big Hemi cars of the 60s.
The Charger is not a feather weight. It was meant to be a big, comfortable bruiser with a 4,160 pound curb weight that happens to be very fast in a straight line. To keep the bulk and power at bay, the SRT8 was fitted with big four-piston Brembo brakes all around, which could stop this car better than you'd expect.
It also got better suspension with Bilstein shocks, stiffer springs, and heavy-duty sway bars. This suspension setup was meant to keep this behemoth planted and steady in turns. This certainly didn't make the Charger feel like a Porsche, but it was predictable and wasn't a tail-happy crowd magnet like the Mustangs.
Very few cars were as fast as the Charger at the time. It could sprint 60 mph in 5.0 seconds and smash the quarter mile in 13.5 seconds with a top speed of 165 mph.
Compared to its rivals, the Charger was also a way better value. Most domestic competitors at that point were slower than the Charger. You had to bring the Germans to stand a chance. The contenders were the E60 M5 and E63 AMG, which were slightly faster but way more expensive, with a price tag of $85,000-$90,000. The Charger cost less than half with an MSRP of $36,000. The closest domestic challenger was the Pontiac GTO, but it lacked practicality.
The Dodge Charger was built on a versatile chassis known as the LX platform which was adaptable to other models. If you didn't want that specific package, but something similar, you had some great options to work with.
The Chrysler 300 SRT8 was Charger in a tailored suit. It traded aggressive styling for a sophisticated Rolls-Royce-esque aesthetic with the brute force of a muscle car. This is for the buyer who wanted to pull up to a fancy dinner and still be able to beat most people in a race before getting home.
There was also the Magnum, which was basically the wagon version of the Charger. Wagons are already rare in the US, and high-performance versions are even rarer in the automotive space as a whole. It offered similar performance as the Charger SRT-8 but with enough cargo space to haul large items over triple digits.
The 2006–2010 Dodge Charger SRT-8 didn’t just prove that a four-door muscle car could work — it completely changed how enthusiasts viewed performance sedans. Before it, fast four-doors were mostly reserved for expensive European brands. The Charger democratized that formula by delivering serious V8 performance at a price point that made it accessible to a much wider audience.
It also laid the foundation for everything that followed. Without the success of the SRT-8, it’s hard to imagine the rise of later high-performance Chargers, including the supercharged Hellcat models that pushed horsepower into the stratosphere. This car proved there was real demand for practical muscle, and Dodge leaned into that identity harder than anyone else.
Today, the Charger SRT-8 represents a turning point — a moment when muscle cars evolved to fit modern needs without losing their raw appeal. It’s not just a fast sedan; it’s one of the key cars that helped shape the modern performance landscape.
The Dodge Charger is still a very affordable muscle car with an average price of $21,000. If you want a mint-condition, low-mileage example, you'd pay close to $30,000. While these may not be considered investment cars yet, they've already bottled in value and are starting to appreciate as people realize the 6.1 Hemis are historically significant. However, some of these cars are already two decades old, so these are some things to watch out for.
The 2006–2010 Dodge Charger SRT-8 is a being considered a great car that paved the way for the 707-hp Hellcats that followed. It proved that the new formula worked, you didn't need to give up the excitement of a fast muscle car just because you needed four doors.
2026-04-05T01:04:52ZSources: Stellantis, Classic.com.