Jeep is leaning hard into nostalgia with a limited-run Rewind package for the 2026 Wrangler and Gladiator. What began as a crowd-pleasing concept has now become a production appearance package that channels the loud, colorful energy of late-1980s and early-1990s design. For buyers who think modern off-roaders have become too restrained, this is Jeep's answer.
A Concept That Made The Jump
The Rewind theme did not come out of nowhere. Jeep previewed the look on a one-off concept, and the reaction from enthusiasts was strong enough to move the idea into the real-world lineup. For 2026, the package lands on the Wrangler and Gladiator in Willys form, giving both vehicles a factory-backed retro makeover rather than leaving owners to chase the look in the aftermarket.
That matters because the package is more than a simple decal set. Jeep is treating Rewind as a proper limited-edition offering within its broader 12-4-12 special-edition program, which continues to roll out new low-volume models on a regular schedule. In other words, this is meant to feel like a collectible trim, not an afterthought.
The Exterior Does Most Of The Talking
The signature element is the graphics package. Jeep gives the Wrangler and Gladiator vivid vintage-style stripes in turquoise, orange, and red tones that look intentionally old-school without turning the truck into a parody. The effect is strongest on the purple Reign paint, where the contrasting colors practically shout from the bodywork, but the package is not limited to that shade alone.
Jeep also added gold-finished wheels and matching tow hooks, which help sell the period-inspired theme from a distance. Beyond the color and trim details, buyers also get off-road tires, body-color fender flares, steel rock rails, and a unique spare tire carrier. The mechanical formula remains familiar, but visually the Rewind treatment makes these models stand apart from the rest of the Wrangler and Gladiator range almost immediately.
The Cabin Keeps The Theme Going
The retro influence continues once you open the doors. Inside, Jeep fits leather seats with embossing inspired by 8-bit graphics, contrast stitching with brighter accent colors, and a gear selector knob designed to resemble an old dot-matrix display. There are also exclusive cupholder plaques that help the cabin feel like something more special than a standard trim with stickers.
Not every concept detail survived the transition to production, however. One of the more playful interior flourishes from the show vehicle, the brightly colored seat insert treatment, does not make the cut here. Even so, the production cabin still carries enough personality to feel cohesive with the exterior package.
What Buyers Get And What It Costs
Rewind is priced at $1,900 on top of the Willys trim. In the United States, the four-door 2026 Wrangler Willys starts at $47,360 including destination, while the Gladiator starts at $48,440. Standard equipment for these models includes a 7.0-inch driver display, heated front seats, a heated steering wheel, LED headlights and fog lights, adaptive cruise control, a locking rear differential with Off-Road+ mode, and programmable auxiliary switches.
Jeep is also limiting the package to a specific group of body colors. Buyers can choose from Bright White, Granite Crystal, Anvil, Gloss Black, Hydro Blue, Joose, and Reign. The Earl color is offered only on the Wrangler version. That controlled color palette reinforces the feeling that Rewind is meant to be a curated special edition rather than a fully open customization menu.
Why This Package Matters
The Rewind package does not rewrite the Wrangler or Gladiator formula, and it is not trying to. Its purpose is emotional rather than transformative. Jeep knows there is still a market for factory specials that feel playful, distinctive, and rooted in brand culture. In an era when many new releases chase minimalist design and screen-heavy luxury, Rewind goes the other way by celebrating visual excess and enthusiast nostalgia.
For the right buyer, that may be enough. The appeal here is not measured in horsepower gains or suspension changes. It is measured in how instantly recognizable the truck looks and how effectively it taps into a different chapter of Jeep culture.
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Source: https://www.motor1.com/news/792814/2026-jeep-wrangler-gladiator-rewind-retro-package/



