Land Rover is preparing to unveil a compact, all-electric member of the Defender family — a rugged little SUV that promises the brand’s trademark go-anywhere capability in a smaller, more affordable package. Prototypes caught testing in near-production trim reveal a chunky, boxy silhouette but with key refinements that make it feel sharper and more modern than its larger sibling. Up front the baby Defender appears less blunt: slimmer headlights and a sleeker nose give the face more poise, while black lower bumpers and pronounced wheelarches emphasise an off-road attitude. Tests show it wearing chunky wheels and all-terrain rubber, though buyers will also be able to opt for a road-focused look with larger alloy wheels and body-coloured panels. Land Rover will lean hard into personalisation: contrasting roof colours, decal packs, wheelarch extensions and heavy-duty roof racks are expected to feature in the options list.
Beneath the familiar exterior language sits a new EMA electric architecture, designed from the ground up for battery-electric drive. Packaging advantages mean the battery sits flat under the floor and the motors are mounted to deliver four-wheel drive without a mechanical central driveshaft. That allows a long wheelbase relative to overall length, a short rear overhang and a near-vertical windscreen — all Defender cues compressed into a smaller footprint. The prototype’s tailgate opens to the side and, while a spare isn’t visible on the test mule, a rear-mounted wheel could surface on production models. Inside, expect a more digitised but still tough cabin. The layout will dial up screen sizes and introduce a fresh user interface that will roll out across the group’s future models. The baby Defender will be a two-row vehicle; there won’t be a seven-seat option, though an occasional jump seat between the front occupants could be offered in some trims. Like other EMA-based cars, this Defender will be purely electric. Early versions are likely to use a dual-motor setup with a battery pack in the 70–90 kWh band. Because of its upright shape, aerodynamic efficiency won’t be its strongest suit; realistic range estimates sit around 480–515 kilometres on a single charge given current battery and motor technology.
Crucially, the electric system opens up new off-road possibilities: torque can be metered precisely between axles and wheels, electronic locking differentials and sophisticated traction control will be able to outperform traditional mechanical systems in certain conditions. Off-road geometry will be constrained by the car’s compact proportions, so approach and departure angles won’t match the largest Defenders, but expect a comprehensive Terrain Response system and selectable drive modes tuned for mud, rock and low-grip scenarios. The absence of a mechanical centre diff won’t prevent serious capability; software and axle-mounted lockers can give impressive control when the going gets rough.
Land Rover is aiming this model below the current full-sized Defender in both scale and price. Pricing is likely to start roughly in the €47,000–€58,500 bracket for entry-level versions, with high-spec variants pushing well above that. It will compete with anything from premium versions of mainstream compact SUVs to the latest luxury alternatives, but few rivals can match the brand’s off-road heritage — particularly in an all-electric package. The company is expected to reveal the compact Defender next year, with sales slated to begin in early 2027. If the final car delivers the blend of toughness, personalisation and usable electric range hinted at by these prototypes, it could become a vital volume model and a new face of Land Rover’s EV future.