Currently reading: Porsche considering two-door and convertible Taycan variants

Electric sports car range could expand beyond saloon and Cross Turismo; lower-slung estate also possible

Porsche could follow up the new Taycan Cross Turismo with two-door, convertible and low-slung estate versions of its flagship performance EV, the Porsche Taycan, according to product boss Stefan Weckbach.

Weckbach revealed that Porsche is discussing additional bodystyles of the Taycan to follow the original sports saloon and new rugged estate version. The new variants being considered include a less off-road-oriented estate based on the Cross Turismo but without the 20mm suspension lift, protective bodykit and Gravel Mode.

Such a model would be conceived as an electric alternative to the Panamera Sport Turismo, an estate version of Porsche’s ICE sports saloon, and would likely share that model’s moniker.

“I can't tell you today if we are really going for something like that,” Weckbach said, but he added that “the platform is perfect for future additional product ideas, and we are thinking in different directions”.

A convertible version of the Porsche Taycan, Weckbach acknowledged, is also technically possible, but Porsche must first establish the extent of market demand before designing a concept. 

Porsche is also aware of demand for an entry-level 4 version of the standard Taycan saloon, matching the most affordable variant of the new Cross Turismo. Weckbach said that there has been no decision on this yet but that the firm is aware of demand for an entry-level Taycan with two driven axles. 

Also possible, although less likely, is a two-door version of the Taycan, which would revive a formula first hinted at in 2019 when design boss Michael Mauer suggested that a two-door coupé version of the same-sized Panamera was possible. 

The Taycan’s bespoke J1 EV architecture can accommodate various bodystyles, although full-sized SUVs will use the PPE platform that will underpin the next-generation electric Macan SUV. 

Weckbach declined to give any details of the electric successor to Porsche's Cayenne flagship SUV but noted that the brand plans to have an 80% electric line-up by 2030, so “there will be a day when we talk about an electric Cayenne”.

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Felix Page

Felix Page
Title: Deputy editor

Felix is Autocar's deputy editor, responsible for leading the brand's agenda-shaping coverage across all facets of the global automotive industry - both in print and online.

He has interviewed the most powerful and widely respected people in motoring, covered the reveals and launches of today's most important cars, and broken some of the biggest automotive stories of the last few years. 

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Emric Deeson 4 March 2021

Not two-doors, but three-doors version would I suggest. Successor of the famous Porsche 928 (car of the year 1978...) and a sporty rival of the Bentley Continental... And, last not least, a typical Porsche (think of 356, 911...).

Peter Cavellini 4 March 2021

Putting the Grrrrrrr, back into Porsche?, nothing like it?,