Nissan’s next-generation GT-R is expected to launch by the end of the decade, and it’s not going to be a pure EV. The new R36 GT-R that will succeed the aging R35 will have a plug-in hybrid powertrain and launch in three to five years, according to Nissan’s chief planning officer, Ponz Pandikuthira, speaking to The Drive.
Nissan’s GT-R set to return by 2030 as a plug-in hybrid
Maybe it could share a platform with a next-generation NSX.
Although it sounds like Nissan is already developing the GT-R in-house, Pandikuthira also hints to The Drive that the company may work with Honda to share a platform with a new Acura NSX. Pandikuthira has dropped a lot of theoreticals about the GT-R. He teases that it could house the 2025 Nissan Armada’s twin-turbo V6 engine, but also drive 70 miles or so on battery only for around-town errands.
Pandikuthira also told The Drive that Nissan had built GT-R EV prototypes but believes an electric version “would complete one lap at the Nürburgring” before needing a recharge, echoing the same concern he had in a 2024 interview with Motor Authority. At the time, Pandikuthira said they had not yet decided what powertrain they would use. Other EVs like the Tesla Model S Plaid have run at least three laps on the Nürburgring on a single charge.
Additionally, Pandikuthira mentioned that Nissan’s in-development solid-state battery technology probably wouldn’t work for the R36 GT-R. “It might be alright for other electric cars that you could do that are the cruising around need to be seen at a country club, but the ultimate raw performance GT-R as an electric car, that’s really quite a ways away,” Pandikuthira told The Drive.
As noted by Jalopnik, it would be tough to hit a deadline for the GT-R by 2030, considering a possible collaboration with Honda could take a while. It raises questions whether Pandikuthira’s comments on the GT-R are aspirational, or if there’s something much further along that has yet to be shared.
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