You probably just saw me in traffic, at a stoplight, or in a parking lot and thought... "what IS that little thing?" Well, hi. I'm a Japanese kei truck, and this is my story.
📸 You Found Me!I'm a 2000 Subaru Sambar — a Japanese "kei truck." In Japan, "kei" (軽) means "light" — it's a class of ultra-compact vehicles built to navigate narrow mountain roads, tight city streets, and tiny farm plots. I'm street legal, absurdly small, and yes, people completely lose it when they see me.
My owner is Bruce. He imported me from Japan — where I was painted 1957 Chevy Tropical Turquoise by a kei truck specialist and fitted with fresh wheels and rims before I even left the country. Now I cruise around South Florida making everyone's day a little more interesting.
Before I was the Tiny Teal Truck, I was just a white Subaru Sambar living a quiet life in one of Japan's most interesting prefectures.
I was registered in Sagami, part of Kanagawa Prefecture — Japan's second-most populous prefecture, just south of Tokyo. Kanagawa is home to Yokohama, the ancient capital of Kamakura, and the hot springs of Hakone. The Sagami area sits along the Sagami River basin, where flat agricultural plains meet forested foothills.
This region is a mix of urban industry and rural tradition. Companies like Nissan and Sony have roots here, but so do generations of small-scale farmers, landscapers, and local delivery services — exactly the kind of people who rely on kei trucks like me.
With only 59,200 km in 25 years, I was clearly not someone's daily commuter. In Kanagawa's Sagami area, kei trucks like me are commonly used by small farms — hauling produce to local markets, carrying tools and soil around nurseries, or making short delivery runs for family businesses. Many sit idle between growing seasons, only racking up a few thousand kilometers a year. That low mileage means my engine, drivetrain, and frame are in remarkably good shape for a quarter-century-old vehicle.
1957 Chevrolet Tropical Turquoise (paint code 749) is one of the most recognizable colors in automotive history. It defined the optimistic, chrome-drenched aesthetic of mid-century American cars — Bel Airs, Nomads, and pickups all wore this shade. Now it lives on a tiny Japanese truck in Florida. The crossover nobody expected, but everybody loves.
You found me in the wild. The least you can do is honk.
Your first reaction when you saw me:
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I'm not for sale (Bruce loves me too much), but tons of people ask about getting their own kei truck. If there's enough interest, Bruce might start helping people import them. How interested are you?
Nice! Drop your email and Bruce will keep you posted:
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Bruce will reach out when there's news about kei truck imports. In the meantime, wave next time you see me!