Porsche has spent years telling the world it believes in electric performance.
The Taycan proved it could build a fast EV. The Macan has moved into electric-only territory. The next generation of Porsche sports cars has also been pulled into the company’s wider electrification plans.
But the 911 is different. Porsche CEO Michael Leiters has now made that clear, saying the brand’s most famous sports car will not become fully electric.
The 911’s future will stay tied to combustion engines and hybrid technology. That may sound like Porsche giving enthusiasts exactly what they want. It is also a sign that the brand has learned that not every icon can be pushed into the EV era at the same speed.
Curated news for men,
delivered to your inbox.
Join the DMARGE newsletter — Be the first to receive the latest news and exclusive stories on style, travel, luxury, cars, and watches. Straight to your inbox.
RELATED: The Porsche 911 Buying Guide: New, Classics & Vintage Models
The 911 Is Not Just Another Porsche
The 911 has always been a difficult car to modernise because so much of its appeal comes from what Porsche refuses to change.

The rear-mounted flat-six, the familiar silhouette, the unusual weight balance and the slow evolution of its design are not quirks to be fixed. They are the reason people care about it. That is why a fully electric 911 was always going to be more complicated than simply adding batteries and chasing faster acceleration figures.
Porsche could almost certainly build an electric sports car with more power, more instant torque and quicker launches than today’s 911. The harder job would be making it feel like a 911.
The current model has already taken its first step into electrification with Porsche’s T-Hybrid system, but that technology is there to sharpen performance rather than turn the car into a silent EV. It gives Porsche room to meet regulations and improve speed without cutting the emotional link that has kept the 911 alive for generations.
RELATED: Porsche’s New Bangkok Tower Lets You Park Your Supercar In Your Living Room
Porsche’s EV Rethink Is Getting Real
Porsche has been rethinking parts of its electric strategy after slower EV demand, rising costs and pressure across its product plans. The brand has already adjusted expectations around future electric models, while internal-combustion and hybrid power are being brought back into conversations that once looked far more EV-focused.

That makes the 911 decision feel less like nostalgia and more like discipline.
Porsche is not walking away from electric cars. It is choosing where electrification makes sense and where it risks damaging the product. The 911 sits firmly in the second category. That does not mean the car will stay frozen in time. More hybrid technology is likely, and future versions will almost certainly become cleaner, faster and more technically complex.
But a battery-electric 911 would cross a line Porsche does not appear willing to cross. The company knows the 911 is more than a model name. It is the car that gives the brand its centre of gravity.
Porsche can afford to experiment elsewhere. With the 911, it has decided the smarter move is restraint.