Jaguar Unveils New Electric GT Concept at Miami Art Week
Jaguar is gearing up for a new era with the highly anticipated unveiling of a new concept car previewing its electric GT on 2 December at Miami Art Week. This announcement follows previous reports from Autocar about the radical concept set to debut next month.
The new concept car is described as the “next stage in Jaguar’s transformation” and will showcase the brand’s ground-up reinvention. The show car will introduce a new design language that will define a three-model lineup, including a four-door GT, a Bentley Bentayga-like SUV, and a Bentley Flying Spur-sized limousine – as exclusively reported by Autocar last year.
All three models will be built on the long-wheelbase JEA platform, developed exclusively for use by new-era Jaguar models. The GT is expected to offer a range of over 430 miles and power outputs exceeding 575bhp, with prices starting at around ÂŁ100,000.
Jaguar managing director Rawdon Glover emphasized the importance of the US market by choosing to reveal the concept there, while still recognizing the brand’s British heritage. The GT is scheduled to go on sale late next year, with deliveries commencing in summer 2026.
In August, JLR began road testing camouflaged prototypes of the next-generation Jaguars, marking a significant milestone in the brand’s evolution. Jaguar recently halted new car sales in the UK and ceased production of the F-Pace SUV for the domestic market, although it remains available in other regions.
JLR CEO Adrian Mardell announced that production of the F-Pace for global markets will end in the first quarter of 2026, aligning with the company’s strategic shift towards a new brand reveal and product launch in 2026.
JLR Reports Profit Increase Despite Aluminium Shortage
In addition to the Jaguar update, JLR revealed that its profit for the first half of the 2025 financial year rose by 25% compared to the previous year, reaching £1.1 billion. Despite facing challenges such as an aluminium shortage that impacted production in the second quarter, the company’s profit before tax for that period dropped by 10% year-on-year to £398 million.