Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. News

Jaguar can take the next F-Type in one of two completely different directions

Add as a preferred source on Google
2018 Jaguar F-Type
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The F-Type, Jaguar’s only true sports car, is waiting in line to get a major makeover. The British company has already assigned a team of engineers and designers to secretly work on the next-generation model due out around the turn of the decade. The project is still at the embryonic stage of development, and product planners haven’t yet locked in key details like what the model will be powered by.

Jaguar is leaving two options on the table, according to British magazine Autocar, and they’re completely different from one another. On one hand, the F-Type could morph into a battery-electric sports car aimed squarely at the upcoming second-generation Tesla Roadster. On the other hand, the F-Type could remain gasoline-powered and receive a Jaguar-specific evolution of the twin-turbocharged, 4.4-liter V8 that powers many BMW models, including the M5 and the recently-introduced X7.

Recommended Videos

Each solution has its own distinct set of pros and cons. Going electric means designers wouldn’t have to package the car around a big V8. They would have considerably more freedom to take the next-generation F-Type in a bolder direction, like they did with the I-Pace, which looks like nothing else on the road. An electric car remains heavier than a comparable gasoline-powered model, however, and even using aluminum couldn’t skew the balance in an electric F-Type’s favor. The V8-powered model would be much cheaper to develop, and it would appeal to a wider audience, but it wouldn’t be as cutting-edge.

Though Jaguar would ideally offer both and let customers choose their team, it needs to pick one option and run with it. The final decision may come down to what the firm decides to do with the rest of its range. An earlier report claims it could transform itself into an electric-only brand in a bid to turn around its slipping sales. If that’s the case, it’s safe to bet that the F-Type will go electric.

Jaguar has time to figure out what to do with the next F-Type and, more broadly speaking, its future. Autocar learned the current F-Type — which recently learned to fly during a rally event — will remain part of the firm’s portfolio for at least two more years, meaning we likely won’t see its replacement until 2021 at the earliest. One thing is for sure: It will live on and return for a second generation.

“Despite sports cars not being a great growth area, there will be a future for the F-Type,” stressed Ian Callum, Jaguar’s head of design.

Ronan Glon
Ronan Glon is an American automotive and tech journalist based in southern France. As a long-time contributor to Digital…
Dreame wants to kit you out with a smartphone, a smart ring, and a rocket-powered sports car
The home appliance brand recently showcased its first phones, three AI smart rings, and a vehicle that hits 60 mph in under a second.
Machine, Spoke, Wheel

Dreame Technology, best known for its robot vacuums and other smart home products, has its sights set on becoming your phone maker, wearable brand, and car company. At its DREAME NEXT event in San Francisco last week, the company unveiled two smartphones, three smart rings, and a rocket-powered sports car, pushing into categories it has never competed in before.

Dreame's first smartphones are built around modular hardware

Read more
Samsung reveals sharp stretchable display that’s ready for your car’s dashboard
The 3D-style dashboard prototype expands and changes with driving conditions, hinting at more adaptive displays in future cars
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

Samsung Display has shown a sharper stretchable display that could make future car dashboards more flexible while keeping key driving information clear.

The company is showing Stretchable Display 2.0 at SID Display Week 2026 in Los Angeles, where the demo takes the form of an automotive instrument cluster. The big change is sharpness. The micro LED-based panel reaches 200 PPI, up from the 120 PPI version Samsung Display showed last year, which puts it around the level of current automotive screens.

Read more
Rivian achieved a 50% lower cost in making the R2 EVs. Let’s hope the benefits pass on to buyers
Rivian says the R2 is 50% cheaper to build, so where’s the price drop?
Rivian R2 in Catalina Blue.

Rivian may have figured out one of the hardest parts of building an affordable EV, as it has managed to reduce costs in producing one of its upcoming EVs. During the latest earnings call, the company said the upcoming R2 has achieved a cost reduction of more than 50% compared to the R1. With the R2 being made as the more accessible mass-market EV, this is a big deal.

Rivian R2 electric SUV

Read more