Twenty-two years after Porsche launched its first SUV, the Cayenne takes another giant leap: an all-electric variant that brings Porsche’s performance DNA to a full-EV format. Called simply the Cayenne Electric, it joins the Macan Electric and the Taycan in a compact, electric trio — and it’s already available to order, priced from about €97,350 for the standard model and €153,150 for the Turbo. If you’re tempted by a bargain used Cayenne, prices currently start at under €15,210.
Built on a variant of the Volkswagen Group’s 800V PPE architecture, the Cayenne Electric carries a large 113 kWh battery that delivers seriously impressive range figures. Porsche cites up to 641 km for the standard version and around 623 km for the Turbo. Ultra-fast charging at up to 400 kW means a 10–80% top-up in under 16 minutes, and Porsche claims the car can recover more than 322 km of range in just 10 minutes. For everyday convenience there’s also inductive charging: park it over a wireless pad (50 kg, 117 × 78 cm, 6 cm high) to top up at up to 11 kW if you fit the optional hardware.
Performance remains core to the Cayenne’s mission. Both versions use dual motors with all-wheel drive, but the outputs are markedly different. The standard model delivers 435 bhp — about 441 hp — and 835 Nm of torque, while the Turbo punches out 1,139 bhp, roughly 1,155 hp, and a staggering 1,500 Nm. A ‘Push-to-pass’ boost adds another 176 bhp (about 178 hp) for 10 seconds of extra thrust. That translates into a 0–100 km/h sprint in 4.8 seconds for the standard car and an astonishing 2.5 seconds for the Turbo. Top speeds are 230 km/h and 261 km/h respectively — remarkable for vehicles tipping towards a three-tonne kerb weight. That mass hasn’t hindered utility: Porsche rates the Cayenne Electric to tow a braked trailer of up to 3.5 tonnes — the highest towing capacity of any current EV in the European market.
Practical changes extend inside and out. The electric Cayenne stretches to 4,985 mm in length — 55 mm longer than its combustion-engined sibling — with a 130 mm increase in wheelbase that boosts rear legroom. External highlights include frameless doors, a choice of aero-optimised 20–22-inch wheels, adaptive aerodynamics in the nose and roof spoiler, and a full-width LED lightbar with illuminated Porsche script. Its drag coefficient is a low 0.25, a full 0.10 better than the petrol model. Cargo space is sensible for family use: a 90-litre front trunk and 781 litres of boot space, expanding to 1,588 litres with the rear seats folded.
Ride and handling are engineered to retain Porsche character: Porsche Active Suspension Management is standard, rear-wheel steering (up to five degrees) helps agility, and the Turbo adds a torque-vectoring limited-slip rear differential. Active Ride tech moderates body movements under acceleration, braking and cornering for a composed feel. Inside, screens dominate. The main Flow Display curves into the centre console and can be paired with an optional 14.9-inch passenger display to create a sweeping digital expanse. The driver’s curved instrument is 14.5 inches and includes touch-sensitive controls for chassis, lighting and cameras. A new augmented-reality head-up display is available, bringing the car’s total screen area to about 87 inches and capable of overlaying navigation cues onto the road ahead. Porsche retains physical knobs for primary climate control and a volume roller to keep essential functions tactile and safe to use on the move.
The Cayenne Electric is a statement: a large, practical SUV that refuses to dilute Porsche’s performance promise while delivering the range, charging speed and towing ability many buyers require. It’s not just an EV Porsche — it’s a Cayenne reimagined for the electric era.