Currently reading: Rolls-Royce to show second £20 million Boat Tail in May

Second of three ultra-bespoke creations will be completed for a springtime debut in Italy

Rolls-Royce will reveal the second of three highly exclusive, coachbuilt Boat Tail models at Concorso d'Eleganza Villa d’Este in May. 

The bespoke Boat Tail convertible is the most expensive Rolls-Royce model of all time, with a price estimated at £20 million. The first customer car was revealed last year, and while the second will be similar in its overall conception, it will be markedly different in terms of its execution - such is the scope of personalisation offered with coachbuilt creations. 

The unique features, therefore, will go beyond paint scheme choices and interior materials. The first car had a totally bespoke dashboard set-up in keeping with the owner's minimalist tastes, a bespoke cutlery set and a fridge specifically for their favourite champagne, for example, so the second Boat Tail could be a radical departure in all areas apart from its silhouette.

The Boat Tail takes its name from a series of coachbuilt pre-war Rolls-Royce models with which it shares a rear-end design modelled on a J-Class yacht.

The four-seat, two-door creation is longer than the Rolls-Royce Phantom on which it is loosely based, measuring 5900mm from bumper to bumper, and features a canopy roof in place of a conventional folding item. It shares its 563bhp 6.75-litre twin-turbo V12 with the Phantom, as well as the aluminium Architecture of Luxury that underpins all new Rolls-Royce models.

It is an embodiment of Rolls-Royce's post-opulent design ethos, as pioneered by the second-generation Ghost. Alex Innes, who heads up Rolls-Royce's Coachbuild division, said the clients behind the three Boat Tail models "appreciated the hallmarks of Rolls-Royce design and encouraged us to move beyond the familiar traits that we see today and design something that points towards the future". 

The third and final car from the series will not be publicly revealed upon its completion, in accordance with the client’s wishes to keep it under wraps.

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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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Pietro Cavolonero 13 January 2022

£2million for a car is far fetched but £20million?? Really?

TBH if they succeed in selling them at that price then the only losers are the buyers so no harm in that then.

 

erolorhun 13 January 2022

Beyond arrogant. 

MarkII 13 January 2022
Sorry RR, the pricing on this is beyond ridiculous and you clearly don't understand the irony of using the phrase 'post-opulent', in the context of a £20 million flight of fancy.