Maddie Price’s garage looks like a dealership with commitment issues. There are Porsche GT3 RS models, a custom pink 911, a Lamborghini, and a pair of lifted Mercedes-AMG G 63 4×4² trucks. There’s also a Ducati, a Suzuki GSX-R, and a tiny Honda Acty van imported from Japan.
And somehow, the car getting the most attention online is a $4,000 Suzuki Cappuccino.
As reported by In Touch Weekly on Thursday, April 23, the Florida-based creator’s collection is valued at around $3 million, putting her in a category usually reserved for seasoned collectors, not 24-year-olds on the internet.
But Price isn’t presenting herself as someone who just collects expensive cars for content.
On social media, where she regularly posts under a “gym and car obsessed” bio, she leans into the details — posting builds, driving clips, and the kind of cars most people wouldn’t expect to see next to a Lamborghini.
That’s where the Cappuccino comes in.
The tiny ’90s Japanese kei car, known for its lightweight frame and cult following, has become one of the most talked-about parts of her lineup. Price has featured it across her content, including a viral clip built around a Tinder-style skit where a “date” pulls up in the car.
The reaction was immediate.
Car enthusiasts flooded the comments, defending the Cappuccino like it was a supercar. The joke landed, but so did something else: people clearly cared more about the oddball import than another predictable luxury flex.
That same dynamic shows up in celebrity garages, too. Jay Leno keeps a Tata Nano — the world’s cheapest car — in a collection filled with far more valuable machines, while Lady Gaga has been spotted parking a Chevy El Camino next to her Lamborghinis.
“I think people expect the car girl thing to be performative,” Price said. “But I can tell you the torque specs on every single one of mine. I picked the colors. I sat at the dealership. I signed the paperwork. These are mine.”
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