Reading view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.

Porsche’s Most Powerful SUV Could Be Its Most Controversial Yet

  • Porsche’s electric Cayenne will offer more power than the Turbo E-Hybrid version.
  • Less flowing design separates EV visually from its combustion-powered sibling.
  • A four-screen cabin layout marks a shift from Porsche’s traditionally clean interiors.

Next year, new car buyers looking for a high-end SUV with a luxury badge and cutting-edge tech will have something new to consider: an all-electric version of the Porsche Cayenne.

The EV follows in the tire tracks of the Macan Electric, offering a distinct design, an entirely battery-powered drivetrain, and a healthy performance boost, all while being sold alongside its combustion-engine sibling. For now, this prototype provides us with the clearest look yet at what’s to come.

Electric Design Language

Like the Macan Electric, the EV variant of the Cayenne will break from the smooth, flowing lines of the gas-powered model. The design appears more upright and muscular, starting at the front with a headlight treatment that mirrors the Macan. Each unit includes four slim horizontal daytime running lights that also function as turn signals.

Read: Porsche’s Next Electric SUV Could Be The Most Controversial One Yet

\\\\\\\\

Baldauf

Much of the front end of this prototype has been covered by non-production-spec parts, but we can make out the shape of the lower grilles, the central positioning of the main radar unit, and the general shape of the bumper. Those lower grilles will be similar to what’s found on the 992.2-generation 911, meaning they have the ability to be opened or closed.

The rear-end design of the electric Porsche Cayenne should also look familiar. Like its smaller electric sibling, the new model will rock narrow LED taillights, likely joined by a light bar. Some of the plastic design details on the bumper and the diffuser also look a little cheap, but these elements should be refined by the time the production model is revealed.

More: Porsche’s Electric Cayenne Dash Packs Four Screens And Barely Any Buttons

 Porsche’s Most Powerful SUV Could Be Its Most Controversial Yet
SHProshots

Earlier spy shots give us a good idea of what to expect inside. The cabin will feature a fully digital curved instrument cluster, a wide central infotainment screen, a dedicated passenger display, and a separate touchscreen for climate controls. While this modern, screen-heavy layout may not appeal to every longtime Porsche fan, it’s clearly aligned with the brand’s push toward a more connected, tech-centric driving experience.

Serious Electric Performance

While debate may rage about the SUV’s design, power-hungry buyers should be more than satisfied with the performance on offer. Though official specs haven’t been released yet, early estimates suggest the base model could produce around 400 hp, with the mid-tier S variant climbing to nearly 600.

At the top of the range, the Turbo versions could push past 1,000 horsepower, comfortably outpacing the already formidable 730 hp from the current Cayenne Turbo E-Hybrid. Expect the quickest model to sprint from 0 to 60 mph (0-96 km/h) in the low two-second range, though Porsche will likely cap top speed at 155 mph (250 km/h), as it often does with its EVs.

When it comes to driving range, Porsche is reportedly aiming for between 350 and 400 miles on a full charge, depending on the variant. That figure would keep the Cayenne EV competitive with other high-performance electric SUVs, while also offering the kind of long-distance capability buyers expect at this level.

\\\\\\\\\

Baldauf

Porsche’s Next Electric SUV Could Be The Most Controversial One Yet

  • Porsche is developing a Cayenne EV with more power than the Turbo E-Hybrid.
  • Prototypes have revealed the SUV will share design similarities with the Macan EV.
  • The new SUV is expected to tow up to 7,716 pounds despite being fully electric.

Building an attractive SUV is no small task. Yet Porsche pulled it off with the first-generation Macan, especially after its mid-cycle refresh. It struck a rare balance, athletic, upscale, and genuinely easy on the eyes.

Unfortunately, the company seems to have taken a different direction with the all-electric Macan. The new EV trades in the sleek, understated styling for something far less elegant. Now, it looks like the larger Cayenne could be next in line for a similar design overhaul.

Read: Porsche’s New Electric SUV Is Smashing Records Before It Even Reaches Showrooms

An all-electric version of the Cayenne is well into development and could break cover by the end of the year. Like the Macan EV, the electric Cayenne will be sold alongside the current ICE-powered model, but will look quite a bit different. As recent spy shots have revealed, it will share design similarities with its smaller siblings and may end up looking a lot like these renderings.

A Familiar Shape, Reimagined

These images, put together by Kolesa, are based on recent prototype sightings, offering a glimpse of the new model. Obviously, as all electric Cayenne prototypes seen up until now have been covered in camouflage, including one recently showcased in the UK, it’s difficult to predict some of the finer styling details accurately.

 Porsche’s Next Electric SUV Could Be The Most Controversial One Yet
Illustration Kolesa
 Porsche’s Next Electric SUV Could Be The Most Controversial One Yet
SHProshots

Nevertheless, these renderings do accurately show the production-ready headlights of the new model, the triangular intakes below the lights, and a large grille towards the base of the bumper, complete with adjustable vertical slats.

And That Rear…

The rear end, much like that of the Macan EV, might prove divisive. It’s expected to adopt narrow LED taillights connected by a full-width light bar, a familiar trait among recent Porsche models. The tailgate design seems fairly plain, and the blacked-out section of the bumper doesn’t do much to elevate the look. Overall, it’s a rear-end that may struggle to win fans.

 Porsche’s Next Electric SUV Could Be The Most Controversial One Yet
SHProshots

Our spies have also given us a look inside the new Cayenne EV, revealing a high-tech cabin where the spotlight falls on a total of four screens. The layout blends familiar Porsche design elements with a few new touches. The dashboard features a curved, non-touch display for the gauges, flanked by two touchscreens, one in the center and one in front of the front passenger, housed under a single glass panel to create the impression of a continuous widescreen.

Unlike the Macan, the Cayenne adds a fourth display on the lower console for climate and seat controls, with only a few physical controls, including temperature toggles and a thumbwheel for volume.

Performance to Match the Badge

 Porsche’s Next Electric SUV Could Be The Most Controversial One Yet
Illustration Kolesa

What the new Cayenne might lack in exterior charm, it’s likely to make up for in performance. Porsche says the Cayenne EV will use an enhanced version of the 800-volt PPE platform, with upgrades that may boost performance and range beyond what’s offered in current models.

Early reports suggest it will surpass the 730 horsepower delivered by the current Cayenne Turbo E-Hybrid. It’s also expected to offer serious towing muscle, with a maximum capacity of 7,716 pounds (3,500 kilograms).

The new Cayenne EV is expected to be officially unveiled later this year, with global sales to follow shortly after.

\\\\\\\

John Halas contributed to this story.

Porsche’s New Electric SUV Is Smashing Records Before It Even Reaches Showrooms

  • The Cayenne Electric has active suspension and a useful 7,716 lbs tow rating, Porsche says.
  • Former Top Gear man Richard Hammond got to try the SUV’s tow skills in a YouTube video.
  • A pro driver then used the Cayenne EV to smash a British hillclimb record by over 4 seconds.

Porsche is set to unveil its first electric Cayenne later this year and will preview a camouflaged version at this month’s Goodwood Festival of Speed. But the EV has already been seen in action at another British hillclimb where it smashed an SUV record by 4 seconds and jumped off the line as fast as the slick-shod purpose-built racecars running at the same event.

The location for the runs was the historic Shelsey Walsh hillclimb, which claims it’s the oldest motorsport venue in the world still using its original course – it held its first event in 1905. Gabriela Jílková, a development driver for the TAG Heuer Porsche Formula E Team, hurled the EV up the twisty 1,000-yard (914 m), 16.7 percent grade road in 31.28 seconds, destroying the 35.53-second record previously set by a Bentley Bentayga.

Related: Porsche’s Electric Cayenne Dash Packs Four Screens And Barely Any Buttons

Official time-keeping data also showed the Cayenne covered the first 60 yards (18.3 m) in only 1.94 seconds, a time equaled at the event only by single-seater racecars with slick tires, despite the Porsche making do with road-legal summer rubber.

Porsche didn’t reveal how much power the record-breaking Cayenne prototype had at its disposal, but we do know some key details thanks to a video in which former Top Gear host Richard Hammond got to try the EV before handing it over to the Jílková for the Shelsey runs.

Hammond confirms that the Cayenne features Porsche’s Active Ride suspension, a system that appears on the Taycan, but not on the Macan EV whose platform the Cayenne shares. He also notes that the synthesized sounds the EV makes in its Track mode sound a bit like a combustion V8’s and says he was told the power output would be greater than the 730 hp (739 PS / 544 kW) generated by the punchiest of the ICE Cayennes, the turbo E-Hybrid.

Potentially of more interest to anyone with boats or trailers to haul is the news that the Cayenne Electric – depending on spec – has a towing capacity of 7,716 lbs (3,500 kg). While certain EVs like the GMC Hummer can pull more (12,000 lbs / 5,440 kg), the Cayenne Electric’s rating matches the tow rating of both the Rivian R1S and the combustion Cayenne which will continue to be sold alongside the new EV.

To prove the point Hammond used the Cayenne to drag his heavy, vintage Lagonda, and claimed the electric motors made light work of hills.

\\\\\\\\\\\

Porsche

Porsche’s Electric Cayenne Dash Packs Four Screens And Barely Any Buttons

  • Porsche’s new Cayenne Electric isn’t short of digital real estate, new spy images reveal.
  • In addition to the digital gauge cluster, the SUV’s dash has three more touchscreens.
  • The Cayenne Electric uses the same PPE platform as the Macan Electric, debuts late ’25.

Porsche has recommitted to building combustion cars in response to slower than expected growth in the luxury electric sector, but it’s still got plenty of EVs in the pipes, including the Cayenne Electric that debuts at the back of this year.

Also: Porsche’s Electric Sports Cars Delayed Again As Problems Mount

These new spy shots give us our best look yet at the first Cayenne EV, including how the Macan Electric’s big brother will look inside. We hope you like screens, because the Cayenne has four of them packed into a dashboard and console that offers plenty of familiar Porsche design cues, but some new ones as well.

More Screens, Fewer Buttons

There are three screens on the upper level of the dashboard, one a curved non-touchable display set back from the main dash that serves as a configurable gauge cluster. Next to that are two touchscreens – one in the center, one above the glovebox – that are housed under a single piece of glass to make it look like one huge display stretches across two-thirds of the interior.

But unlike the Macan, the Cayenne has a fourth tablet-sized touschcreen located lower down on the console, which will presumably handle climate and seat heating/cooling duties. Physical buttons appear to be in short supply, though we can see four toggles that look like they’ll be used for nudging the temperature up and down, and a thumbwheel volume control.

\\\\\

SHProshots

A Porsche Sport Chrono clock sits on top of the dash, a feature that dates back to the introduction of the 997-generation 911 in 2004, and the Cayenne Electric adopts the dash-mounted toggle gearshifter used on all of Porsche’s most recent four-door cars. But the shape of the console is new, a pronounced hump just below the dash possibly making room for a smartphone charging tray underneath.

Familiar Platform, Fresh Execution

This prototype stepped out wearing no bulky disguise and just some fake headlight, DRL and grille stickers to hide the true details of a front end that’s likely to look very similar to the Macan Electric’s. And that’s not all they share. The Cayenne EV isn’t an electrified version of the ICE Cayenne, but is built on a stretched version of the VW Group PPE platform found under the Macan EV as well as Audi’s A6 e-tron and Q6 e-tron.

The Cayenne should borrow some of the Macan’s motors, though it’ll likely skip the RWD versions’s 335 hp (340 PS / 250 kW) unit and kick things off with the 402 hp (406 PS / 300 kW) from the Macan 4. At the other end of the scale a full-house Turbo will easily eclipse the 630 hp (639 PS / 470 kW) Macan Turbo.

Coming in 2026, Starting Around $90K

Watch out for the first zero-emissions Cayenne’s global debut later this year and expect to see the EVs on the street in 2026 priced from around $90,000, though a well-optioned Turbo will probably set you back well past the $130,000 mark.

\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\

SHProshots

❌