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Today β€” 20 March 2026Main stream

Rolls-Royce Backs Away From EVs As Customers Would β€œRather Have A V12”

  • Rolls-Royce delays EV-only plan as customers continue demanding traditional V12s.
  • Electric Spectre remains, but petrol models stay as brand pivots to demand-led strategy.
  • Regulatory changes and market hesitation give Rolls-Royce room to rethink EV timeline.

Rolls-Royce once promised a whisper-quiet electric future. Turns out, its customers still prefer a different kind of whisper. The kind that comes from a silky V12 under a mile-long hood.

The British luxury marque has quietly backed away from its plan to go fully electric by 2030. Instead, it’ll keep building petrol-powered cars well into the next decade, because that’s what its ultra-wealthy clients are still asking for. And when your customers are dropping $400,000 or more on a car, you tend to listen.

More: Six Figure Rolls-Royce Spectre Discounts Raise The Question Why Are Rich Buyers Avoiding EVs

According to CEO Chris Brownridge, demand for EVs just isn’t universal among Rolls buyers.

β€œFor every client that loves an electric vehicle there is one who does not,” said Brownridge, according to The Times. β€œWe recognise some clients would rather have a V12 engine. The V12 is part of our history.”

It’s also part of the experience. Rolls-Royce buyers aren’t chasing lap times or charging speeds. They want effortlessness, presence, and that unmistakable waftability a big combustion engine delivers.

Though we can’t help thinking it’s maybe more about knowing there’s a V12 up front rather than experiencing it. A smooth, silent, effortlessly responsive electric motor setup like the one in the Spectre (seen below) that Rolls launched in 2022 seems like a logical fit for a uber-luxury sedan or coupe in the way it’s not for a $1 million hypercar that’s all about noise, drama and emotion.

Regulations Are Also Shifting

 Rolls-Royce Backs Away From EVs As Customers Would β€œRather Have A V12”

The shift isn’t just about customer taste, anyway. Changing regulations have played their part. Softer government EV targets in key markets have given Rolls-Royce more breathing room, and since it operates as a low-volume manufacturer, it isn’t bound by all of the same rules as mass-market brands.

That flexibility matters. Rolls builds cars to order, meaning it can adapt to what clients actually want rather than chasing arbitrary production targets. Right now, that means a mix of electric and petrol, not an abrupt switch to one or the other.

Rolls-Royce isn’t alone in hitting the brakes. Bentley, Aston Martin, and Lamborghini have all softened their EV timelines as reality catches up with ambition.

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