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Porsche Considering Combining Taycan And Panamera Into One Model

Porsche is reportedly considering merging the Taycan and Panamera into a single model line, offering petrol, plug-in hybrid and fully electric variants under one umbrella. According to a report by Autocar, the proposal forms part of broader cost-cutting measures under new Porsche CEO Michael Leiters following a slowdown in global sales and rising development costs

Porsche is reportedly considering merging the Taycan and Panamera into a single model line, offering petrol, plug-in hybrid and fully electric variants under one umbrella. According to a report by Autocar, the proposal forms part of broader cost-cutting measures under new Porsche CEO Michael Leiters following a slowdown in global sales and rising development costs

Both the Porsche Taycan and Porsche Panamera currently occupy similar positions in Porsche’s line-up as large performance saloons, but they are built on entirely different platforms. The Panamera uses Porsche’s MSB architecture, shared with the Bentley Continental GT, while the Taycan sits on the J1 electric platform, which is also used by the Audi e-tron GT.

Future generations of the two models were previously expected to move to separate next-generation architectures. The Panamera is set to transition to Porsche’s Premium Platform Combustion (PPC), while the Taycan successor had been planned to migrate to the delayed SSP Sport electric platform.

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Porsche Considering Combining Taycan And Panamera Into One Model

However, with development costs for dedicated electric models continuing to rise, Porsche is said to be reassessing the viability of maintaining two entirely separate engineering programmes for what are essentially similar vehicle segments. One possibility being explored is greater parts sharing or even a unified model identity, although successor versions may still sit on different underlying platforms.

Porsche already operates a similar strategy with the Porsche Macan, where combustion and electric versions coexist under the same model name despite being based on different architectures. A similar approach is also planned for the next-generation Porsche Cayenne.

From a financial perspective, the consolidation could help Porsche manage rising development costs. The company has already written down €1.8 billion in platform-related investments and warned of pressure on profitability as it adjusts its electrification roadmap.

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Rob Lewis

Rob is a senior writer at Urban Observer, with more than 10 years of lifestyle magazine experience. Passionate and detail oriented, he has a proven track record of reliability and fairness that sets him apart from others. Always looking for the next big story!

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