Porscheβs Electric Cayman Is Coming Even If You Still Want The Old One

- Porsche is testing the upcoming Cayman Electric at the Nurburgring.
- Two prototypes show different wheels and an active rear spoiler.
- Single-motor RWD and dual-motor AWD versions will be offered.
Porsche brought electric power to its sports car lineup for the first time last year with the launch of the 911 GTS Hybrid, but thatβs pretty mild compared with whatβs about to happen to the 911βs Boxster and Cayman baby siblings. The two-seat coupe and roadster are ditching combustion technology altogether, and spy photographers have just snapped a couple of Cayman prototypes trialing their EV powertrains on and around the Nurburgring.
Related: Porsche 718 Cayman Electric Spied For First Time
Our scoop photo teams has spotted the Boxster several times before over the last couple of years and they snapped some grainy, long-lens pics of the Cayman on its first trip outdoors at the beginning of the year. But these fresh images are much sharper and show two cars with different wheel designs.
A Familiar Silhouette, Under New Power
Despite switching to an all-electric powertrain, the proportions of the new Cayman are very similar to those of todayβs ICE-powered car. It still looks like a classic mid-engined junior supercar with a nose that dives towards the pavement and a sleek fastback tail. One of the great things about the ICE 718s is how practical they are thanks to having a trunk at either end, and we expect the EVs to carry on that tradition.
The set of pictures taken on the Nurburgring itself shows a small active spoiler at the base of the liftback hatch in a raised position. Directly below it in the center of the bumper is the charging flap for the battery that is mounted vertically behind the seats and will feature 800-volt tech. The nose features the same active cooling slats seen on the 911 GTS Hybrid and the disguise on the rear quarter window and lower quarter panel hides an upswept windowline and lower air intake, like on the Mission R concept.
Rear-Drive or All-Wheel Drive? Youβll Have Options
















Images: Baldauf
Both single-motor, rear-wheel drive and dual-motor, all-wheel drive versions should be available when the Boxster and Cayman go on sale in 2026 as MY27 cars. Though the 911 has been available with AWD traction for 35 years, this will be the first time itβs been offered in the mid-engined, entry-level sports cars.
Porsche has partially put the brakes on its electrification plans due to slower-than-expected development of the electric market, and is extending the lifespan of combustion engines and re-engineering some still-secret new EVs to take ICE power. But the new 718 Boxster and Cayman were too far down the development path to be reconfigured with an ICE option in time for launch.
Itβs possible Porsche could adapt them and introduce combustion options later, as Fiat is doing by turning its slow-selling 500e into a hybrid. Although global 718 sales were down in Q1, that was largely due to the car being dropped in Europe due to the same cybersecurity regulations that forced the demise of the old ICE Fiat 500. In the US, 718 sales almost doubled in the first three months of this year.
The Real Test: Handling Like a Porsche
Porsche is also reported to have been struggling to make the EV Cayman handle as well as the outgoing combustion car, a problem that might have led to pushing back the planned debut from 2025 to 2026 β and can only drive sales of the current 718. The automaker canβt afford to mess the handling up, because the Cayman Electric is going to face some stuff competition from the new Alpine A110 EV.







