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Bentley’s Baby Electric SUV Is Coming In 2026, What If It Looks Like This?

  • Bentley’s first electric SUV will be smaller and sleeker than the popular Bentayga.
  • The company will introduce new BEVs and PHEVs annually between 2026 and 2035.
  • These renderings preview how the new EV could look if based on the Audi Q6 e-tron.

Earlier this month, Bentley unveiled plans for its highly anticipated debut into the world of electric vehicles, which will take the form of a “luxury urban SUV.” Set to be smaller than the Bentayga, this new model promises to be sleeker as well, according to a teaser released by the marque. Will the finished product look anything like this when it finally arrives?

Eager to see how the new SUV could look, digital artist Theottle has used the new Audi Q6 e-tron as a base and then grafted on a slew of visual changes to give it the style you’d expect from a Bentley. While we suspect the finished version will look a little different, the overall shape and profile of the SUV in these renderings may prove to be quite accurate.

Read: Bentley Confirms First EV For 2026 But Pushes Back EV-Only Goal By 5 Years

The front end immediately stands out from the larger Bentayga as it’s been lifted from the exclusive Mulliner Batur, a limited-run model that Bentley introduced a couple of years ago. It has the same grille, air intakes, and the same sleek headlights that are more oval-shaped than those used by other Bentleys.

 Bentley’s Baby Electric SUV Is Coming In 2026, What If It Looks Like This?
Illustrations Theottle
 Bentley’s Baby Electric SUV Is Coming In 2026, What If It Looks Like This?

Significant alterations have also been made to the Audi Q6 e-tron’s door skins as they now rock bold new creases and black skirts. The rear three-quarters of the Bentley is also quite sexy and includes a pair of slim taillights, a prominent roof spoiler, and a blacked-out bumper. The tailgate looks a little naked with only the Bentley badge, however, and would benefit from also having the ‘Bentley’ script.

Bentley is keeping details about its upcoming luxury urban SUV under wraps, but we do know it will be part of a broader wave of electrified vehicles from the brand. The British automaker plans to introduce a new BEV or PHEV every year from 2026 to 2035, with the goal of transitioning to an entirely BEV lineup by the end of that period.

It’s worth noting that Bentley’s original goal was to become a fully electric brand by 2030, but that timeline was recently pushed back to reflect the slowdown in the growth of the EV market

So, what do you think of Bentley’s electric ambitions? Is adding an electric SUV the right move, or should they have taken a different path? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

Bentley Confirms First EV For 2026 But Pushes Back EV-Only Goal By 5 Years

  • Bentley to launch its first EV in 2026, describing it as smaller than the Bentayga and the “first true Luxury Urban SUV.”
  • The luxury brand also promised a new BEV or PHEV every year until 2035, when it will go EV-only – five years later than previously predicted.
  • Bentley’s revised Beyond100+ strategy is an update of the earlier Beyond100 plan, modified to take account of the slowdown in EV market.

Bentley will reveal its first-ever EV in 2026, the firm revealed today as it announced the Beyond100+ electrification strategy that will take it to 2035 and beyond.

The British luxury brand, which currently only sells V6 and V8 vehicles following the death of the W12 engine this summer, described its maiden fully-electric model as the “first true Luxury Urban SUV,” claiming it will create an entirely new segment in the car market. But it also pushed back its plan to go electric-only from 2030 to 2035.

Related: Bentley Delays EV-Only Plans And Turns Focus To Hybrids

An accompanying silhouetted image of the EV shows the profile view of an SUV that looks broadly similar to today’s Bentayga but with a lower rear roofline, curvier fender shoulders, and a more pronounced flick at the base of the D-pillar. CEO Frank-Steffen Walliser told us at a press briefing the new car would be less than 5 m (197 inches) long, making it considerably smaller than the Bentayga, which measures 5.1 m (202 inches) in standard form and 5.3 m (210 inches) in stretched EWB guise.

Walliser claimed the EV would be more modern than its sister SUV and was targeting a new type of customer that might not have considered a Bentley before. He conceded that “to be honest, there’s not a lot of demand” for electric power from the brand’s traditional buyers but said there were plenty of other potential customers out there who would find the EV appealing. Walliser also described the current EV market slump as “a dip” and suggested interest in electric cars would bounce back.

 Bentley Confirms First EV For 2026 But Pushes Back EV-Only Goal By 5 Years

Bentley didn’t give any further concrete details about the EV but did say its range would be “surprising” and suggested it had come up with a new way to generate a soundtrack that wasn’t synthetic, and was a technique no one else in the car industry was currently using. And it asserted that it would never offer electric and combustion versions of the same model.

Walliser also announced that we’d see a new BEV or PHEV every year between 2026 and 2035 when the firm will switch to making only fully-electric cars and SUVs. The automaker had previously committed to going EV-only in 2030 when it announced its original Beyond100 electrification plan in 2020. However, the new Beyond100+ program has been adapted to take account of the slowdown in the growth of the EV market.

 Bentley Confirms First EV For 2026 But Pushes Back EV-Only Goal By 5 Years

“Everybody knows that the market looks different than was projected in 2019 – this is not Bentley-specific, it’s valid for the whole car industry” Walliser said. “So we had a look at the strategy, we kept with the plan to bring the first BEV in 2026 and have it in the market in 2027, but we also [changed] what we would do in the future with plug-in hybrids and ICE.”

High-end automakers have been hit particularly hard by the shift in demand for EVs. Bentley’s sister brand Porsche, where Walliser worked for two decades, has struggled to shift once-popular models like the Taycan, and recently revealed that it would be adapting future EVs currently in development to take hybrid power in response to market changes.

Bentley’s focus will also be on hybrid powertrains like the electrically-assisted V8 now fitted to the Flying Spur and Continental. But it also promised it would still launch new variants and “special models” with pure ICE engines, starting with a version of the Bentayga we’ll see next year.

The automaker’s first EV and other electrified models will all be developed at the Bentley’s historic Crewe base in the northwest of England, which is being overhauled with a new design center, paint shop, and BEV assembly line. But as with Bentley’s existing models, we can expect future cars and SUVs, including the new EV, to share platforms and components with other VW Group products.

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