Porsche didn’t just pull the covers off the long-awaited Cayenne Electric—it slammed them to the ground with 1140 horsepower and a mission statement: welcome to the new era. The company’s third EV, following the Taycan and Macan Electric, rewrites the Cayenne formula for the first time since the SUV’s 2002 debut. And in typical Porsche fashion, it arrives with numbers that border on excessive, even by Stuttgart’s increasingly absurd standards.

A New Chapter… With an Asterisk
The fourth-generation Cayenne abandons combustion entirely—at least in this version. Sitting atop the EV-only PPE platform, it was meant to signal Porsche’s push toward an 80% electric lineup by 2030. But with EV momentum cooling globally, Porsche hit pause on that pledge. The freshly massaged third-generation Cayenne will continue alongside this new electric flagship well into the 2030s, giving buyers a buffet of petrol, hybrid, and full electric options.
Porsche calls this twin-track strategy “meeting customers where they are.” We call it hedging the most German way possible.
The Turbo: Porsche’s Most Powerful Road Car. Ever.
On launch next year, the Cayenne Electric comes in two flavors: a 402-hp base model (£83,200) and the certifiably wild Turbo (£130,900).
The Turbo’s dual-motor setup is the headline act:
- 1140 bhp (with launch control)
- 1106 lb-ft
- 0–62 mph in 2.5 seconds
- 0–124 mph in 7.4 seconds
- Top speed: 162 mph

For context, that’s Bugatti Veyron territory—from a 2.5-tonne SUV shaped roughly like a rolling penthouse suite.
The secret sauce is a motorsport-derived direct-oil-cooled rear motor, engineered for high continuous output rather than just microwave-burst sprint power. Day to day, the Turbo produces 845 horses, but drivers get 174 extra horsepower for 10 seconds via a ‘push-to-pass’ steering-wheel button—yes, like a video-game nitro boost, except real.
It even outmuscles Porsche’s own Taycan Turbo GT, becoming the most powerful Porsche road car ever built.
The Sensible Sibling
The entry-level Cayenne Electric uses a more sedate dual-motor setup producing 402 hp—identical to the Macan 4 Electric. It’s no slouch at 0–62 mph in 4.8 seconds, but it’s clearly the everyday commuter, not the hyper-SUV.
Both models tow 3.5 tonnes, because of course they do.
Battery, Range, and Warp-Speed Charging
Feeding the motors is a 113-kWh pack offering:
- Up to 398 miles (base model)
- Up to 387 miles (Turbo)

Using the PPE’s 800-volt architecture, charging peaks at 390 kW, good for a 10–80% top-up in under 16 minutes. Porsche claims 600 kW of regen—protect your passengers’ necks.
A world-first: optional wireless charging.
Buyers can spec a £2000 inductive receptor and a £3000 floor pad for 11-kW wireless top-ups. Pricey, yes, but groundbreaking.
A single-motor RWD version will follow later, mirroring the Macan lineup.
Dynamics: When Physics Is Optional
The Turbo receives Porsche Active Ride, a brainy suspension that nearly eliminates roll and pitch. Add rear-axle steering, torque vectoring, and a locking rear diff, and the Cayenne Electric should drive like something half its mass.
An optional off-road package increases approach angles, skins the underbody, and tells your friends you “might go camping this year.”
Design: The Cayenne, Streamlined
Aerodynamics dominate the redesign. The Cayenne’s familiar open grille is gone, replaced with a clean, solid panel and a lower bonnet. Active aero now includes:
- Moveable cooling flaps
- Air curtains
- Adaptive roof spoiler
- Active rear blades (Turbo)
- Lower rear diffuser

Result: a 0.25 drag coefficient—beating the Lotus Eletre and edging close to Mercedes’ slipperiest EVs.
The body is 55 mm longer with a stretched wheelbase adding 130 mm of rear legroom. In other words: it’s finally limo-friendly.
Interior: The OLED Overload Era
Inside, Porsche debuts its Flow Display: a sweeping OLED that merges the digital cluster, a split 14.25-inch infotainment screen, and an optional 14.9-inch passenger display—Porsche’s largest-ever screen array.

Physical buttons remain for climate and audio (thank you, Porsche), and a massive 87-inch head-up display is optional.
Creature comforts include:
- Heated seats, panels, armrests, and door cards
- Electrically adjustable rear seats
- Up to 781 liters of cargo space (1588 liters seats-down)
- A 90-liter frunk
There are 13 paint colors, 9 wheel designs (20–22 inches), and 12 interior themes, plus five interior packages.

The 2026 Porsche Cayenne Electric isn’t just an EV version of a best-selling SUV—it’s a technological flex, a hypercar-humbling statement piece, and a calculated bet that buyers want the future, but at their own pace.
It’s the most outrageous Cayenne ever built, and possibly the most outrageous Porsche, full stop.
If this is the beginning of Porsche’s new era, it’s starting with fireworks.
Source: Porsche