Porsche is at an EV crossroads. The company released its first all-electric model, the Taycan, over six years ago, and its second, the Macan Electric, just last year. The Macan, while well-received by critics, has yet to replace its gas-powered equivalent as originally planned. As for the electric 718 Boxster and Cayman sports cars? Crickets.
This is the backdrop against which Porsche launches its third EV, the Cayenne Electric. Don’t worry—the gas and hybrid Cayennes aren’t going anywhere, the electric base, S, and Turbo models just join the fray later this spring.
After spending most of a day driving and poking around it, I can tell you that this is the Volkswagen Group’s most impressive electric car yet, and a true sports car experience in an SUV body. But excellence doesn’t come cheap.
Photo by: Porsche
| Quick Specs | 2026 Porsche Cayenne Turbo Electric |
| Drivetrain | Dual-Motor AWD, 108-kWh (usable) battery |
| Output | 844 hp (1,139 hp in overboost) / 1,106 lb-ft |
| 0-60 MPH | 2.4 Seconds |
| Range | 350-387 Miles (WLTP, Combined) |
| Charging Time (10-80%) | 16 Minutes |
| Trim Base / As Tested | $165,350 / $213,190 |
The Cayenne Electric uses a platform Porsche internally calls “E4,” as this is the fourth generation of Porsche’s inaugural SUV released since 2002. It’s a heavily modified version of the VW Group’s Premium Platform Electric (PPE) architecture, specifically designed for larger SUVs.
It’s almost identical in size to the existing “E3” Cayenne, growing two inches in length but shrinking one inch in height. Compared to the Macan Electric, it’s eight inches longer and just under two inches wider, with a five-inch-longer wheelbase.
At the front, it looks like a bigger Macan, but a bit more upright, with frog-like headlights. In profile and around back, the roofline is more traditional SUV and less fastback. I think the Cayenne’s best angle is the rear three-quarter, where flared rear arches, a diffuser, and a full-width rear light bar combine for a more aggressive rear fascia than that of its smaller sibling.
Lots Of Screens
The Cayenne’s cabin is a bit of a screenfest. Between the 14.3-inch digital instrument cluster and the 14.9-inch touchscreen passenger’s display, you get this huge, curved screen Porsche calls a “flow display.” The lower portion has your climate controls, music controls, phone controls, and shortcuts, while the larger portion can display a map or menu in full-screen.
Ahead of the curved screen, Porsche puts a wrist rest designed to make prodding the touchscreen and haptic buttons more comfortable. Below it, there’s a wireless phone charger, two cupholders, USB-C ports, and a nicely sized storage cubby ahead of the movable center armrest.
I was skeptical of the whole curved screen situation, but the interface and Google OS-based system are more intuitive than you’d think, especially with configurable shortcuts and widgets. I’m still not crazy about haptic buttons to control things like the defroster, lights, and heated seats. Thankfully, there are hard toggles on the center stack for temperature and fan speed, and a roller for volume, as well as physical buttons on the steering wheel.



Photos by: Porsche
Photos by: Porsche
Feels Like The Gas Cayenne On The Inside
Porsche managed to keep the interior dimensions nearly identical to those of the gas-powered Cayenne, despite the addition of a battery and a rear-mounted electric motor. You lose four cubic feet of cargo room with the rear seats folded, but gain a 3.2-cubic-foot frunk, so we’ll call it even.
I tried Porsche’s new ventilated 18-way Sport seats, and they strike a nice balance between highway comfort and road-hugging bolsters. At 6’2, I could sit behind myself in the back seat with plenty of head- and legroom.
Pros: Drives Like a Porsche, Impressive Range & Charging, Surprisingly Intuitive Interface
You Can Actually Tow With It
It can also tow up to 7,700 pounds, which is significantly more than the Macan Electric’s 5,500-pound max rating. There’s no word on highway range while towing, but if your electric Porsche SUV use case includes towing a boat (or a race car), this is the one you want.
I’ll admit, I rarely find electric sports cars—er, SUVs—entirely compelling. While EVs are great for commuting and fascinating technologically, the combination of stomach-twisting torque, usually heavy weight, and complete silence tends to be a bit of a one-note experience. The exceptions—the Porsche Taycan, related Audi e-tron GT, and Hyundai Ioniq 5 N—prove the rule. Add this Cayenne to that short list.

Photo by: Porsche
True Porsche Driving Dynamics
I sampled the 844-horsepower Turbo variant (which can technically exceed 1,000 horsepower in ten-second push-to-pass and launch control modes). Like all fast EVs, the thrust is mind-bending at full throttle, but what’s more impressive is the pedal calibration.
Porsche is great at fine-tuning driver inputs, and where some EVs with this amount of power feel jumpy or even nauseating, the Cayenne’s throttle is precise and easy to modulate. Porsche engineers told me they didn’t include one-pedal driving on the Cayenne (or Porsche’s earlier EVs) because they wanted to give drivers finer control over the car. The brakes are firm and linear, too, allowing you to dial in just enough stopping force without giving your passengers motion sickness. Job well done, Stuttgart.
Cons: Priced Like A Porsche, Options List Is A Novel
The star of the show, though, is Porsche’s latest Active Ride system. A $7,790 option on the Turbo model, it uses active dampers to sense forces and apply counteracting pressure into the car’s body to reduce jarring impacts, flatten corners, and generally make the Cayenne behave like a car that weighs 3,400 pounds, not 5,400.
The genius of these systems is that they eliminate any compromise between ride and handling, and make big, heavy cars seemingly defy the laws of physics. I’ve never driven an SUV that handles this well or rides this smoothly, bar none. It feels like cheating.

Photos by: Porsche

Photos by: Porsche
Porsche says the Cayenne Electric’s Active Ride is more capable than previous versions on the Panamera and Taycan because of its additional suspension travel. There’s a new Comfort mode that effectively eliminates all pitch, dive, and roll. It’s a bit uncanny the first time you cruise over a speed hump and feel the car raise ever so slightly, only to come down without any secondary motion or head toss.
Finally, Porsche added a V8-inspired soundtrack in Sport and Sport+ modes. There are no fake gears as in Hyundai’s Ioniq 5 and 6 N, but the auditory cues are fairly subtle and welcome when you’re hustling.
Porsche Cayenne Electric Verdict

Photo by: Porsche
All this tech and performance come at a price. The base Cayenne Electric starts at $111,350 including destination, while the Turbo I drove cost a whopping $213,190 as-tested, given a $165,350 base price and nearly $50,000 in options.
That’s a big jump from the base gas Cayenne’s $92,250 starting price, though the 729-hp Cayenne Turbo S E-Hybrid costs roughly the same as the newer and more capable Turbo Electric. In a high-end EV market that’s increasingly tepid, it’s hard to say how the Cayenne Electric will fare with Porsche buyers.
That said, this is Porsche’s most technically impressive EV yet. Anyone who drives it, even an EV skeptic, will be impressed.
2026 Porsche Cayenne Turbo Electric
Motor
Dual Permanent-Magnet Synchronous Motors (Front & Rear)
Battery
113-kWh (Gross) / 108-kWh (Usable)
Output
844 hp (1,139 hp in overboost) / 1,106 lb-ft
Transmission
Single-Speed Transmission
Drive Type
All-Wheel Drive
Speed 0-60 MPH
2.4 Seconds
Maximum speed
162 Miles Per Hour
EV Range
350 – 387 Miles (Combined, WLTP)
Charge Time
16 Minutes (10-80%)
Charge Type
DC Fast Charging, Up To 400kW
Seating Capacity
5
Towing
7,700 Pounds
Cargo Volume
26.4 / 54.9 Cubic Feet
Base Price
$165,350
As-Tested Price
$213,190
On Sale
Mid-2026
We want your opinion!
What would you like to see on Motor1.com?
Take our 3 minute survey.
– The Motor1.com Team