The new Porsche Cayenne Electric has entered production

The new Porsche Cayenne Electric has entered production

By now, we’ve all heard the line: Porsche is going electric without losing its soul. But the new Cayenne Electric doesn’t just repeat that promise—it shows what it looks like when Stuttgart actually puts its money, its factories, and its engineering pride behind it.

The Cayenne Electric debuted in November 2025, and Porsche didn’t waste time turning press releases into reality. Production is already rolling in Bratislava, Slovakia, on the same flexible line that builds gasoline and hybrid Cayennes. That matters more than it sounds. It means Porsche isn’t hedging—it’s committing. Whether buyers want pistons, plug-ins, or pure electrons, Porsche can shift production on the fly.

But the real story here isn’t just that the Cayenne has gone electric. It’s how Porsche built it.

An Electric SUV with Supercar Muscle

Let’s get straight to the headline number: 850 kilowatts, or 1,156 horsepower, in the top-spec Cayenne Turbo. That makes it the most powerful production Porsche ever built—more than any 911, more than the Taycan Turbo GT, more than anything wearing a crest.

That figure alone tells you what Porsche is trying to do. This isn’t a polite family EV that happens to be fast. This is a Porsche first and an electric vehicle second.

Porsche isn’t publishing Nürburgring times yet, but let’s be clear: an all-wheel-drive electric SUV with this much output is going to bend physics, shred tires, and embarrass a long list of combustion-powered super SUVs.

A Battery Porsche Actually Owns

Most carmakers buy their batteries. Porsche decided that wasn’t good enough.

Instead, it developed its own battery modules in-house and built a dedicated factory—the Porsche Smart Battery Shop in Horná Streda, about 100 kilometers northeast of Bratislava—to make them. This facility handles everything from cell preparation to laser welding, foaming, cooling-plate integration, and end-of-line testing.

That matters because batteries are now what engines used to be. If you don’t control them, you don’t really control the car.

The Cayenne Electric uses a 113-kWh high-voltage battery built around large pouch cells for high energy density. Porsche claims more than 600 kilometers (370+ miles) of range, along with 800-volt fast charging. But the real engineering flex is the double-sided cooling system—cooling plates above and below the battery, a world first in a production vehicle. It keeps the pack in its ideal temperature window more consistently, which means more sustained performance, better charging, and longer life.

In Porsche-speak: fewer compromises.

A Factory Built for the Electric Age

The Cayenne Electric is born in a newly expanded platform hall at Volkswagen Group’s Bratislava site in Devínska Nová Ves. This is where the skateboard-style EV chassis takes shape before the body—side walls, roof, doors, hood, and tailgate—is added from one of Europe’s most modern press shops.

It’s almost fully automated, fast, and obsessively precise. And Porsche keeps its own engineers on site permanently through what it calls a “resident model”, making sure problems are solved in real time instead of disappearing into corporate email chains.

That’s how you launch a new generation of vehicles without the usual startup chaos.

A Porsche Interior That Finally Goes Full Digital

Inside, the Cayenne Electric goes harder into screens than any Porsche before it. It has the largest total display area the company has ever installed, paired with a faster, more responsive Porsche Communication Management (PCM) system.

More importantly, Porsche says this will be the most customizable Cayenne ever. Given how obsessed Cayenne buyers are with personalization, that could be as big a selling point as horsepower.

The Cayenne Electric isn’t just another electric SUV. It’s Porsche using its engineering culture to try to dominate the premium EV space the same way it once ruled sports sedans and performance SUVs.

With over 1,100 horsepower, a battery Porsche builds itself, a cutting-edge factory, and a platform designed for both volume and flexibility, this isn’t a compliance car. It’s a power move.

The Cayenne made Porsche rich. The Cayenne Electric might be what keeps it relevant.

Source: Porsche