{
  "type": "article",
  "title": "Inside Torcal, the Electric SUV Bentley Is Betting Its Future On",
  "summary": "Bentley has revealed its new Torcal electric SUV at a private preview in the UK, launching it into a global luxury EV market where Lamborghini, Ferrari, Porsche and other rivals are already retreating.",
  "content": "Bentley has pulled the wraps off its first fully electric SUV, called the Torcal, at a closed door preview near the automaker's headquarters in the UK, stepping into a global luxury electric vehicle market that is currently in retreat rather than growth.\n\nA Name Borrowed From Spanish Rock, Not Racing History\nBentley watchers had been expecting a different name entirely. Trademark filings earlier this year showed that Bentley had registered both Torcal and Barnato across Europe and the UK, covering motor vehicles, electric cars, charging cables and charging stations. Most observers assumed Barnato, a tribute to 1920s Bentley enthusiast and racing driver Woolf Barnato, would win out. Instead, Bentley chose Torcal, leaving the Barnato name on the shelf for now.\n\nFollowing the pattern set by the Bentayga and other Bentleys before it, the Torcal name is drawn from a natural landmark, El Torcal de Antequera in Andalusia, Spain, a striking limestone landscape of stacked rock formations shaped over millions of years. The word also happens to carry an automotive echo of its own. Torcal descends from the Latin torquere, meaning to twist, the same root that gives English the word torque, used to describe the rotational force produced by an engine or an electric motor. For a brand built on power and performance, it is a fitting double meaning.\n\nWhat the Torcal Looks Like Up Close\nAt the preview, much of the detail Bentley shared cannot be published yet, but the family resemblance to the Bentayga is unmistakable. The Torcal is a little smaller than its combustion sibling, keeping the long hood and upright nose Bentley is known for, along with the brand's familiar haunches over the rear wheel arches, though on this car they appear slightly less resolved than on the Bentayga.\n\nEven so, it comes across as an attractive, powerful and purposeful looking SUV. It gets a switchable glass sunroof and completely new light clusters front and rear. The rear lights mark a real departure from the Bentayga, swapping the familiar oval shape for a single clean line running across the tailgate. The roofline also slopes down toward the rear of the car, a treatment increasingly common on electric vehicles because it cuts aerodynamic drag and helps stretch driving range, even if it sits a little at odds with the traditionally upright, formal profile Bentley SUVs have carried until now.\n\nThe most striking change sits at the front. The traditional grille, which normally exists to ventilate a radiator that an electric car mostly does not need, is replaced by a solid wall of illuminated crystals, a design said to take its cues from the face of the Continental T. It is a bold, deliberately unsubtle styling choice, running counter to the quiet luxury look many rival brands have leaned into recently.\n\nStep inside through the all round powered doors, and it is clear Bentley's designers have rethought their approach to switchgear. Physical buttons for key functions sit alongside OLED screens rather than replacing them outright, and the central display curves downward in a manner similar to the new Cayenne. Notably, Bentley has chosen not to follow other high end manufacturers into offering a separate front passenger screen, and there will not be an option to add one later either.\n\nBentley Is Launching Into the Worst Moment for Luxury EVs\nBentley chairman and chief executive Frank-Steffen Walliser calls the Torcal the most considered car in the company's history, and given the state of the market it is entering, it will need to be exactly that. Whatever its final specifications turn out to be, the Torcal arrives at arguably the toughest point yet to sell a premium electric car.\n\nLamborghini shelved its Lanzador electric GT earlier this year after concluding, in the words of chief executive Stephan Winkelmann, that demand among its buyers was going almost to zero, if not to zero. Ferrari's first EV, the Luce, wiped billions off the company's market value within hours of its reveal in Rome, and Ferrari has since pushed its second electric model back to 2028.\n\nMercedes-Benz sold just 1,450 units of its electric G-Wagen in Europe through April 2025, compared with 9,700 for the combustion version over the same period. Audi discontinued the Q8 e-tron entirely after closing its Brussels plant, blaming what it called a global decline in customer orders in the electric luxury class segment.\n\nThen there is Porsche, Bentley's stablemate inside the Volkswagen Group. Depreciation on the Taycan has been so severe that some dealers have reportedly refused to accept their own brand's performance EV as a trade in against a new purchase. Porsche's 2025 results show group operating profit collapsing 93 percent to 413 million euros, dragged down by a 3.9 billion euro writedown tied to unwinding its EV strategy. Rolls-Royce Spectre sales are down 44 percent, and Mercedes' EQS SUV is down by roughly the same margin.\n\nThis is the shaky state of the luxury EV market that Bentley is now steering its new Torcal into, and it explains why the company is treading so carefully with this launch.\n\nCan Bentley Avoid the Same Fate?\nCompared with several other Western luxury brands right now, Bentley looks like it is holding up better, though only up to a point. In March, Bentley reported its seventh consecutive year of profitability, posting 216 million euros in operating profit on 2.6 billion euros of revenue, an 8.3 percent return on sales. That result, however, is 42 percent lower than the year before, a sharp reminder that even Bentley is not immune to the wider slowdown.\n\nBentley is self-funding the conversion of its historic A1 building in Crewe, England into a battery electric assembly line, along with a new design centre and paint shop. To help pay for that transition, it has quietly cut 275 management and non-manufacturing roles. Like other Western brands, Bentley is also seeing demand fall in China, historically one of its most important markets.\n\nThis is not the first time Bentley has hedged its EV bet. In 2024, just months after Walliser joined the company, Bentley pushed back its target of going fully electric by five years, from 2030 to 2035, under a renamed Beyond100 Plus strategy. It plans to keep selling plug-in hybrid and combustion models alongside the Torcal for years to come, and a second fully electric Bentley is not expected before 2030.\n\nWalliser: Now People Just Want to Have a Car\nWalliser frames a shift in buyer psychology as central to Bentley's timing. Technology seekers that consider themselves opinion makers wanted cars that looked different, he says, so they could show they were advanced and using the latest tech, which is why those cars had to look different. Now, he says, people don't want that anymore, they just want to have a car, and that is why Bentley's timing may finally be right, using all of the brand's DNA, being careful, and delivering a car that feels authentic rather than putting on a show.\n\nIt's an evolution of the brand, he adds, and the right thing for Bentley to do is not chase revolutions but refine things a little more at the edges.\n\nBetting Big on China\nIt is a reassuring line, though the designers at Mercedes likely felt just as confident when they faithfully carried the combustion G-Wagen's look over to its electric version, only to see sales lag far behind the original. Still, there is one market where Bentley has real reason for optimism, China.\n\nFerrari's first EV, the Luce, may have landed badly in the West and dented the brand's image there, but signs are emerging that it is getting a very different reception from wealthy buyers in Asia. Despite carrying a sticker price of $586,600, early reports suggest the entire first year allocation of 88 units for that market was snapped up almost instantly. Bentley and Walliser will no doubt be hoping the Torcal finds a similarly enthusiastic welcome once it eventually goes on sale.\n\nWhat this means for you\nFor luxury car buyers and EV shoppers: If you already own a premium electric SUV like the Porsche Taycan or Mercedes EQS, resale values are falling sharply, so expect a bigger hit than usual when selling or trading one in.\n\n• Anyone eyeing Bentley's new Torcal will likely wait longer for firm pricing and a launch date, since full specifications are still under wraps.\n• Buyers who prefer petrol, diesel or hybrid luxury cars have more choice for now, since Bentley itself is delaying a full switch to electric until 2035.\n\nQuestions & Answers\n\n1. What is the Bentley Torcal?\nIt's Bentley's new fully electric SUV, revealed at a private preview near Bentley's UK headquarters, and it clearly shares its lineage with the Bentayga.\n\n2. Why did Bentley choose the name Torcal over Barnato?\nBentley had trademarked both Torcal and Barnato in Europe and the UK, but it went with Torcal, named after the El Torcal de Antequera rock formation in Spain, instead of Barnato, which would have honoured racing driver Woolf Barnato.\n\n3. What does the new Torcal look like?\nIt resembles the Bentayga but is slightly smaller, featuring an illuminated crystal grille inspired by the Continental T, new light clusters, a sloping rear roofline and a switchable glass sunroof.\n\n4. Does the Torcal get a passenger-side screen like some rival luxury EVs?\nNo, Bentley has chosen not to offer a separate front passenger screen and confirmed there won't be an option to add one.\n\n5. How is the luxury EV market performing right now?\nPoorly, Lamborghini shelved its Lanzador EV, Ferrari's Luce hurt the company's market value, Mercedes' electric G-Wagen trails the combustion version in sales, Audi discontinued the Q8 e-tron, and Porsche's operating profit collapsed 93 percent.\n\n6. Is Bentley itself in good financial shape?\nIt reported its seventh straight profitable year in March, with 216 million euros in operating profit on 2.6 billion euros of revenue, though that is 42 percent lower than the year before.\n\n7. When will Bentley go fully electric?\nIt pushed its target back from 2030 to 2035 under its renamed Beyond100 Plus strategy and will keep selling plug-in hybrid and combustion models alongside the Torcal.\n\n8. Is there any bright spot for luxury electric cars?\nYes, in China, where Ferrari's entire first-year allocation of 88 Luce units reportedly sold out almost instantly despite a $586,600 price tag, and Bentley hopes the Torcal sees similar demand there.",
  "url": "https://trendkia.com/en/gear/bentley-ne-utari-nai-ilektrika-suv-torcal-lagjari-ev-bajara-ki-susti-ke-bicha-bara-danva-5205",
  "category": "Gear",
  "publishedAt": "2026-07-06",
  "tags": [
    "Bentley Torcal",
    "Electric SUV",
    "Luxury EV market",
    "Bentayga",
    "Ferrari Luce",
    "Porsche Taycan",
    "Volkswagen Group"
  ],
  "language": "en",
  "site": "TrendKia"
}