Renault pulls the curtain back on its new flagship SUV, the Filante, on 13 January — a bold bid to go toe-to-toe with premium machines from Genesis, BMW and Mercedes-Benz. Built in Busan under Renault’s long-standing joint venture with Samsung, the Filante is aimed squarely at markets where large, luxurious crossovers still command strong interest, and it arrives with a clear brief: deliver European design and refinement tailored for Korean buyers.
Early teasers tease a striking profile: a long, relatively low roofline, an assertive upright nose and oversized daytime-running lights that echo motifs from Renault’s smaller models. The silhouette feels stretched and purposeful rather than bulky, suggesting a focus on presence and elegance rather than pure off-road capability. Renault positions this as an E-segment luxury offering, so expect proportions and finishes that read upmarket from every angle.
Size and space are core selling points. The Filante should measure roughly 0.005 km in length (around five metres), trading some compactness for expansive second-row accommodation and a roomy cabin ambience. Inside, Renault promises a sumptuous atmosphere: high-grade materials, generous legroom for rear passengers and the latest widescreen infotainment displays mounted in clean, modern layouts. The aim is to make the back seat a genuine sanctuary — the kind of automotive living room that buyers in this segment prize. Underneath, this won’t be a conventional Renault platform. The Filante rides on a shared architecture co-developed with Volvo through Renault’s partner network — the same flexible underpinnings used by merchandise like the XC40. That architecture supports conventional petrol engines and hybrid systems, and Renault appears set to equip the Filante with a line-up of four-cylinder petrol and hybrid powertrains already used in related models.
Despite the platform’s electric capability, there are no battery-electric versions confirmed at launch. The decision to build a top-tier model that won’t be sold in France — and likely won’t be offered across much of Europe — is a strategic one. Rather than shoehorn a low-volume luxury car into a market where demand is limited, Renault has chosen to optimise the Filante for South Korea. There the appetite for larger premium vehicles remains healthy, and positioning the Filante as a European-flavored challenger gives it a distinct point of difference versus homegrown and German rivals. Marketing will lean into that European credibility while tuning the car to local tastes: suspension, interior appointments and feature lists can be tailored to what Korean buyers expect from high-end SUV buyers. The result should be a vehicle that looks and feels unmistakably Renault yet competes directly with luxury marques on equipment and presentation. The Filante also serves a wider purpose in Renault’s strategy. It’s one of eight models announced under the company’s “International Game Plan,” a push to broaden global reach with products designed specifically for markets beyond Europe.
Over the next 12 months, Renault will roll out a wave of internationally focused models intended to diversify revenue and sharpen competitiveness in regions where demand and premium aspirations differ from Europe’s. Although the Filante itself may never reach European showrooms, its design language, material choices and technology will likely influence future high-end Renaults intended for the brand’s core markets. For now, the Filante is Renault’s statement that it can craft a luxury SUV with continental style, global ambition and the regional focus needed to compete in one of Asia’s most discerning vehicle classes.