Porsche’s New Cayenne Coupe EV Hits 60 As Fast As The 911 Turbo S And Can Still Tow Your Boat

- The new Cayenne Coupe Electric arrives with three distinct power levels.
- Turbo variant produces 1,139 horsepower and hit 60 mph in 2.4 seconds.
- Buyers still get adaptive air suspension and up to 7,700 pounds of towing.
The Porsche Cayenne Coupe has never quite added up on paper. It’s a sportier, less practical version of an SUV meant to add a boatload of practicality to a sporty brand. Now, Porsche is adding another powertrain because buyers want options.
After some 40 percent of U.S. buyers chose the less practical Coupe body style of the Cayenne in 2025, they have an all-new, all-electric version available, and it just so happens to boast up to 1,139 horsepower (850 kW).
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We’ve known for a while that this was coming. Porsche already released the Cayenne Electric SUV. This is the Coupe version with its “911-inspired” roofline. It also features a unique roof structure and a coupe-specific windshield, giving it a more steeply raked profile than the SUV.
Under the sheet metal and cramped back seat, you’ll find the same bones as the normal Cayenne Electric. That includes an 800-volt architecture, a 113 kWh battery, and the ability to leverage a 400 kW charger to go from 10-80 percent in under 16 minutes.
Read: Porsche Turns Cayenne EV Coupe Into A Hypercar Hunter
The base model starts at 435 hp (325 kW) and 615 lb-ft, which already feels like overkill for a daily SUV. Step up to the Cayenne S Coupe Electric, and you’re looking at 657 hp (490 kW). But the real headline grabber is the Turbo Coupe Electric: up to 1,139 hp (850 kW) and 1,106 lb-ft, with a claimed 0–60 mph (97 km/h) time of just 2.4 seconds. That matches the fastest 911 on sale today, the 911 Turbo S.
Top speeds vary depending on the model, ranging from 143 mph (230 km/h) in the base version to 162 mph (261 km/h) in the Turbo.
That’s not just quick. It’s supercar territory in something that can tow 7,716 lbs (3,500 kg). Adaptive air suspension, optional rear-axle steering, torque vectoring, and Porsche’s trick Active Ride system all make appearances, too. Buyers can also opt for an Off-Road Package that improves approach angles
The Sport Chrono package and a panoramic glass roof are both standard on the Coupe. Charging hardware includes a NACS port on the driver-side rear fender and a J1772 AC port on the passenger side, with a CCS adapter included as standard.
Pricing starts at $113,800 and climbs to $168,000 for the Turbo, with deliveries expected by late summer 2026.
Importantly, Porsche isn’t replacing the gas Cayenne. Or even the plug-in hybrid. They’re all sticking around. That’s key because it makes the brand’s viewpoint clear. Customers can pick and choose whatever type of powertrain they want for the foreseeable future.
SPECS & PRICING
| Model | Power | Torque | 0–60 mph | Top Speed | MSRP* |
| Cayenne Coupe Electric | 435 hp (325 kW) | 615 lb-ft (834 Nm) | 4.5 | 143 mph (230 km/h) | $113,800 |
| Cayenne S Coupe Electric | 657 hp (490 kW) | 796 lb-ft (1,079 Nm) | 3.6 | 155 mph (249 km/h) | $131,200 |
| Cayenne Turbo Coupe Electric | 1,139 hp (850 kW) | 1,106 lb-ft (1,500 Nm) | 2.4 | 162 mph (261 km/h) | $168,000 |

















