Stellantis and Jaguar Land Rover have opened talks on a possible product development partnership in the United States, a move that could help JLR strengthen its position in a market where its big luxury SUVs already carry serious weight.
The two carmakers have signed a non-binding Memorandum of Understanding to study ways to work together in the US. For now, that is the important caveat. This is not a confirmed platform-sharing deal, factory plan or joint venture.
Stellantis and JLR said the discussions would cover product and technology development. A firm deal would still need separate binding agreements and the usual approvals before anything can happen.
Stellantis CEO Antonio Filosa said partnerships in product and technology development could benefit both companies while keeping attention on customer products and experiences.
JLR CEO PB Balaji said the talks would help JLR look at capabilities that support its long-term US growth plans.
The talks make most sense when seen through JLR’s US ambitions. JLR sells high-margin models such as the Range Rover and Defender in the market, but it does not build vehicles there. Stellantis already has a large North American industrial base through brands including Jeep, Ram, Dodge and Chrysler.
The talks also fit into Stellantis’ wider push to reduce platform complexity and development cost. Separately, the group has unveiled STLA One, a global modular architecture due in 2027 that would replace five existing platforms and support more than 30 models by 2035.
Stellantis also wants half of its volume to sit on three global platforms by 2030, with up to 70% component reuse.
None of this confirms what JLR may use, but it shows the industrial logic behind Stellantis’ search for broader scale.
















