Mercedes-AMG has revealed the interior of its next GT 4-Door Coupe.
AMG is trying to sell more than a fast EV here. It is trying to prove that an electric AMG can still feel like an AMG, not just on a spec sheet but from the driver’s seat onward.
The layout is heavily driver-led. There is a low seating position, a 10.2-inch digital instrument cluster, a 14-inch central display angled towards the driver, and an optional 14-inch passenger screen.
Mercedes-AMG said the idea is to create more direct interaction between driver and machine.
The most interesting part is the new AMG Race Engineer control setup on the centre console.
Three rotary controls let the driver adjust motor response, agility and traction intervention. It suggests AMG knows an electric performance car needs more than eye-catching screens and a dramatic name. It needs ways to shape how the car reacts beneath the driver.
Whether those controls are actually useful on the road, or turn into another layer of digital blustery, is something we will have to judge later.
Elsewhere, the cabin mixes familiar big-ticket luxury items with slightly flashier touches.
There are sporty front seats, an optional three-seat rear bench instead of the standard two-seat rear layout, wireless phone charging pads, illuminated cup holders, a large panoramic glass roof and configurable ambient lighting.
The roof can also be fitted with Sky Control, which allows sections to switch between transparent and opaque. At night, AMG even adds lit graphics into the roof panel. Some buyers will love that. Others may decide the car is trying a bit too hard.
Mercedes-AMG also said the car runs the latest MB.OS software architecture, with AMG-specific display themes including telemetry-style layouts.
The interior looks rich in features, but also very busy. If every surface, screen and lighting effect is asking for attention, the purity AMG keeps talking about could get diluted.
Even so, the new AMG GT 4-Door is not merely an electric replacement for the old car.
It is AMG’s attempt to define what a dedicated high-performance EV sedan should feel like from the inside. That is a bigger ask than adding power and a fast charging number.
The cabin suggests AMG understands this. The harder part will be making the finished car feel as convincing on the move as it looks in the studio.




















