Porsche has shown the Cayenne Electric’s cabin ahead of its debut at the end of 2025, focusing on bigger screens, more seat adjustment and extra comfort tech.
The centrepiece is a curved Flow Display that runs into the centre console, forming the brand’s largest continuous screen area to date.
Drivers get a 14.25-inch OLED instrument cluster; a 14.9-inch passenger screen is optional and can stream video without distracting the driver. An AR head-up display projects lane and nav guidance with an 8.7-inch effective image.
Rear seats are now electrically adjustable as standard. A panoramic roof with Variable Light Control can switch between clear, matte and two semi-transparent settings.
New surface heating warms the seats plus armrests and parts of the doors for more even warmth than hot air alone, and the cabin lighting package has been expanded.
Owners can tailor the look widely: 13 interior colour combos, four interior packs and five accent packs, plus new shades such as Magnesium Grey, Lavender and Sage Grey. A leather-free Race-Tex option with Pepita print nods to classic Porsche trim. For deeper custom work, Porsche Exclusive Manufaktur and the Sonderwunsch programme remain available.
On the software side, Porsche Digital Interaction adds themes that sync colours across the displays, and a voice assistant can handle climate, seats, lighting and media in natural language, including follow-up questions.
A Digital Key in a phone or watch uses UWB to auto-lock or unlock and can be shared with up to seven users.
Overall, the update centres on bigger, curved OLED displays, richer seat and climate features, broad trim choices and deeper in-car apps. The changes are aimed at making daily use simpler without losing the Cayenne’s familiar layout.
COUNTERPOINT: Independent automotive designer and YouTuber Marouane Bembli doesn’t think highly of the new Cayenne Electric interior. Display overkill is his major grouse.














