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    Home » Revealed: The Most Powerful Porsche Ever
    MOTORING

    Revealed: The Most Powerful Porsche Ever

    November 20, 2025
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    Porsche has unveiled the 2026 Cayenne Electric, marking its second fully electric SUV and cementing the model’s status as the brand’s most potent production vehicle to date. Despite earlier speculation about scaling back electrification ambitions, the German marque pressed ahead, introducing base and Turbo variants that blend blistering acceleration with familiar driving dynamics. Production begins next summer at the Leipzig plant, with UK deliveries slated for late 2026, broadening Porsche’s EV portfolio alongside the Macan Electric.

    The lineup caters to varied preferences: the standard Cayenne Electric musters 402 horsepower in everyday mode, surging to 435 horsepower and 615 pound-feet of torque via Launch Control, courtesy of its dual-motor all-wheel-drive configuration. The Cayenne Turbo Electric elevates the stakes, delivering 844 horsepower normally and an astonishing 1,139 horsepower—paired with 1,106 pound-feet—when unleashed, propelling it from 0-60 mph in 2.4 seconds and through the quarter-mile in 9.9 seconds. Such figures position it as a drag-strip contender, though Porsche engineers emphasise balanced usability over outright excess.

    Both share a 113-kilowatt-hour battery pack and an 800-volt architecture supporting up to 400 kW charging, enabling a 10 to 80 per cent top-up in as little as 16 minutes under optimal conditions. Regenerative braking handles nearly 97 per cent of deceleration at up to 600 kilowatts, extending brake life, while optional ceramic composite discs provide fade-free stopping for the Turbo. As reported by Car and Driver, European WLTP testing yields up to 400 miles of range, though real-world UK figures may dip to around 350 miles amid motorway-heavy driving and variable weather.

    A standout innovation is the optional 11 kW wireless home charging pad, allowing effortless overnight replenishment by simply parking over the inductive coil—though practicalities like debris interference or heat buildup remain under scrutiny by early testers. The chassis incorporates standard Active Suspension Management for composed handling, with Turbo models gaining Torque Vectoring Plus and optional rear-axle steering for agility. Porsche’s Active Ride system, borrowed from the Taycan and Panamera, counters body roll, dive and lift through hydraulic actuators, ensuring poise during spirited cornering or sudden braking.

    Visually, the Cayenne Electric adopts a Macan-inspired silhouette: a rounded rear, softened front fascia and memory-sketch proportions that diverge from the combustion Cayenne’s sharper lines, potentially blending into urban traffic more seamlessly. Yet, signature elements persist—the iconic side profile, flared arches and optional 22-inch wheels—while the illuminated Porsche crest and matrix LED headlights maintain brand flair.

    The interior upholds Porsche’s driver-centric ethos, with a 14.3-inch OLED instrument cluster, a curved central OLED spanning infotainment and climate functions, and an optional 14.9-inch passenger screen. Analogue knobs for volume and air conditioning preserve tactility amid the digital expanse, complemented by supportive seats, ambient lighting and a 1,455-watt Burmester audio system. Cargo space reaches 1,670 litres with seats folded, and the frunk adds 64 litres for smaller items.

    UK pricing starts at £92,200 for the base model and £138,500 for the Turbo Electric, undercutting rivals like the Mercedes-Benz EQS SUV while promising superior dynamics. According to MotorTrend, this positions the Cayenne as a benchmark for luxury EV performance, with over 50 per cent of Porsche’s sales now electrified globally. As the brand targets carbon neutrality by 2030, the Cayenne Electric not only electrifies an icon but redefines high-end SUV expectations, blending raw power with everyday refinement for enthusiasts undeterred by charging infrastructure gaps.

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