Currently reading: Jaguar no longer sells any new cars in UK - and won't until 2026

Brand is set to reveal plans for next-generation cars later this year but will sell only used cars in the UK until 2026

Jaguar no longers sells any new cars in the UK, and won't until its first next-generation model arrives in 2026.

This comes as UK market production of the F-Pace, the final new Jaguar left on sale in the UK, ended.

It follows UK production of the XE, XF and F-Type, made at Castle Bromwich, and the E-Pace and I-Pace, assembled by Magna Steyr in Austria, ending earlier this summer.

All these cars, plus the F-Pace, can now only be bought from stock. The F-Pace, I-Pace and E-Pace are still in production for other global markets, however.

The decision comes ahead of Jaguar’s major brand reinvention later this year, which is expected to preview a 600bhp electric four-seat GT in the vein of the Porsche Taycan.

That will later be followed by a Bentley Bentayga-style luxury SUV in 2026 and then a large luxury saloon. All three will sit on a new, bespoke platform called JEA.

Ahead of these cars hitting the road, Jaguar will take a “reset period”, managing director Rawdon Glover previously told Autocar.

A statement sent to Autocar from Jaguar parent company JLR read: “From November 2024, new Jaguar sales will come to an end ahead of our new brand reveal later this year and product launch in 2026. 

“We have now ceased allocation of our current generation of Jaguar vehicles. We do have a selection of models available to acquire on an Approved Pre-Owned basis through our UK retail network.”

Last year, Jaguar sold 21,943 examples of the F-Pace globally– outselling the rest of the six-car line-up combined and achieving more than double the sales of the second-placed I-Pace (7000). Since it went on sale in the UK in 2016, some 67,000 have been sold in the market. 

Speaking previously about axing Jaguar’s current line up, JLR boss Adrian Mardell said: “None of those are vehicles on which we made any money, so we are replacing them with new vehicles on newly designed architectures.”

The decision was made easier by the fact that JLR sales are dominated by the Range Rover, Range Rover Sport and Land Rover Defender, the trio making up more than half of the total.

Will Rimell

Will Rimell
Title: News editor

Will is Autocar's news editor.​ His focus is on setting Autocar's news agenda, interviewing top executives, reporting from car launches, and unearthing exclusives.

As part of his role, he also manages Autocar Business – the brand's B2B platform – and Haymarket's aftermarket publication CAT.

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Oldson 1 November 2024

2026? My bet is there won't be another Jaguar branded car ever again. 

Marc 1 November 2024
I see the prototype of the new model a few times a week around where I live in North Warwickshire, whilst you can't see the detail you can see the overall profile and it looks fantastic. It's wide with a long bonnet, short cabin with what looks like a kamm tail rear with an LED rear light strip running across and down both sides.

Whilst it's easy to criticise mardy Mardell and Gezza, something drastic had to be done with the brand, arguably it's already dead, so there is little to lose and there's a whole new breed of millennials out there with plenty of cash to spare, who know or care nothing of Jaguar's heritage but want the next new thing

Andrew1 1 November 2024

An electric car with long bonnet and short carbine might look good from outside but it will be dead on arrival compared to rivals, when you take interior space into account.

Symanski 1 November 2024

My thoughts exactly.   EVs have different packaging needs, and you don't need a long bonnet any more.   If there was ever one criticism of Jaguar is was their cabins were too tight.

 

I tested the XE and my brother and his wife weren't so keen on the rear seats not having enough room.   You've got to build a design around the use, not squeeze it in later.

Marc 1 November 2024
I think you may be missing the point. I think this new model will focus on a new design language for the brand rather than what should or shouldn't be done with EV packaging. A wheel at each corner and huge wheelbase in between is good for family focussed needs but I don't think that's what this is about, besides they already tried that packaging with the iPace and that was a disaster.
Symanski 1 November 2024
Marc wrote:

 ...besides they already tried that packaging with the iPace and that was a disaster.

Their marketing department had absolutely no clue what to do with the i-Pace.   Never highlighted the benefits of the new packaging.   Jaguar marketing at the best of times is poor, but this was beyond incompetence.

 

From all the previews I've seen, this new design language is the Land Rover saloon that McGovern has always wanted to do and little more.

 

Marc 1 November 2024
It maybe, but it'll be the new design that sells it, if it sells at all. Land Rover products are proof that when you get the design language and marketing right, you can literally sell turds. This new saloon is literally the last chance saloon for Jaguar.
Andrew1 1 November 2024

So the point is that it is supposed to sell in looks only, ignoring the usability factor, i.e. a niche market. Good luck with that, hopefully it will look better than it sounds.

The I-Pace didn't sell because it was ahead of its time, particularly with charging infrastructure.

Marc 1 November 2024
I'd argue the iPace didn't sell because it was shit. It pandered to the motoring press and little else.

Time will tell what this new saloon looks like, how it performs and is packaged, but hopefully they have got it right. But with a track record like the company formally known as Prince, sorry, JLR or whatever they are called this week I don't hold out much hope.

Symanski 1 November 2024
Marc wrote:

I'd argue the iPace didn't sell because it was shit.

Not quite.   When it was benchmarked against its premium rivals it was always in the top half or better, against models that were newer and had more time to develop.

 

Tesla for range and acceleration was always better, but they're just not as nice a place to be in.   And the build quality isn't great either.   Plus way too much is burried in the touchscreen.   Might be ok for California sitting in traffice, or where you don't need to adjust the heating, but you really need a passenger to copilot a Tesla with the controls for you.

 

Marc 2 November 2024
"you really need a passenger to copilot a Tesla with the controls for you"

Not quite. Don't believe everything you read in the papers and from motoring journalists who spend a matter of hours in car before supposedly giving us a thorough review.

On pretty much every journey, all you need to do is swipe the screen to go forwards or backwards, and that's it.

Symanski 2 November 2024
Marc wrote:

Not quite. Don't believe everything you read in the papers and from motoring journalists

No, it's from my own experience being in my brother's Tesla.

 

Although one of the problems with motoring journalists is they all seem to jump upon the same comments and not their own views of a car.   Good or bad.

 

jason_recliner 2 November 2024
Andrew1 wrote:

An electric car with long bonnet and short carbine might look good from outside but it will be dead on arrival compared to rivals, when you take interior space into account.

 

 

So just make it bigger if you need more space. Style is more important than efficiency.

Andrew1 2 November 2024

Not in the world of sensible people. Besides, style is controversial. Just look at Range Rover: a hugely ineficient, shapeless monstrosity.

Marc 1 November 2024
I see the prototype of the new model a few times a week around where I live in North Warwickshire, whilst you can't see the detail you can see the overall profile and it looks fantastic. It's wide with a long bonnet, short cabin with what looks like a kamm tail rear with an LED rear light strip running across and down both sides.

Whilst it's easy to criticise mardy Mardell and Gezza, something drastic had to be done with the brand, arguably it's already dead, so there is little to lose and there's a whole new breed of millennials out there with plenty of cash to spare, who know or care nothing of Jaguar's heritage but want the next new thing