Porsche CEO Says No Electric 911 as the Icon Stays True to Its Roots
Porsche may be leaning deeper into electrification across parts of its lineup, but the 911 appears to be staying loyal to the formula that made it an icon. According to a Reuters report citing comments from Porsche CEO Michael Leiters at an event hosted by German outlet Auto Motor und Sport, the company does not plan to produce a fully electric version of the 911. For enthusiasts who still view the rear-engine sports car as the emotional center of the Porsche universe, that bit of news should land like a perfectly timed downshift.
The reported comments come as Porsche continues to rethink just how aggressively it wants to move toward EVs. The brand already has fully electric models in its portfolio, and more electrified products are part of the broader strategy, but the 911 has always played by its own set of rules. It is not just another model in the showroom. It is the car that carries Porsche’s identity, history, motorsport attitude, and a massive amount of customer loyalty. Turning it into a full EV would be more than a powertrain change. It would be a philosophical shift.
That does not mean Porsche is keeping electricity completely away from the 911. The latest 911 GTS introduced Porsche’s T-Hybrid system, and the 2026 911 Turbo S has adopted similar hybrid assistance. The setup pairs a 3.6-liter flat-six with electric assistance built into the eight-speed dual-clutch transmission and electrically aided turbocharging. Purists may still debate the added complexity, but the performance speaks loudly, with the new Turbo S reportedly capable of reaching 60 mph in just two seconds.
Porsche’s broader product strategy has also been shifting as customer demand for EVs cools in certain markets. The next-generation 718 lineup, once expected to go electric-only, is reportedly being reworked to accommodate combustion engines. Porsche has also announced plans for another combustion-powered SUV to join its existing utility vehicle offerings. That suggests the company is listening closely to buyers rather than forcing a one-size-fits-all EV future across every model line.
The 911 may not move the same volume as Porsche’s SUVs, but it remains one of the most important vehicles the company builds. While models like the Macan and Cayenne continue to carry much of the sales weight, the 911 is the emotional anchor that gives Porsche credibility no crossover can fully replace. It is the sports car people picture when they hear the Porsche name, whether they are lifelong owners or kids seeing one for the first time.
For now, this feels like the right call. Electric performance is undeniably impressive, but the 911 has always been about more than numbers. It is about the sound, the weight transfer, the flat-six character, and the evolution of a design that somehow keeps getting better without losing itself. Hybrid power can help Porsche sharpen the 911 without erasing what makes it special. A fully electric 911 may be off the table, and for many Porsche faithful, that is exactly how it should be.
