Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

Ferrari reveals its first EV, with design help from Jony Ive

read original get Ferrari Purosangue EV Model → more articles
Why This Matters

Ferrari's debut electric vehicle, the Luce, marks a significant milestone in the luxury automotive industry by blending high-performance EV technology with innovative design collaborations from Jony Ive and Mark Newson. This move signals a shift towards electrification in the high-end sports car market, emphasizing both cutting-edge aesthetics and advanced engineering. For consumers, it offers a glimpse into the future of luxury EVs that prioritize both style and performance.

Key Takeaways

is a senior tech and policy editor focused on online platforms and free expression. Adi has covered virtual and augmented reality, the history of computing, and more for The Verge since 2011.

After months of teasers, Ferrari is offering the first full view of its Luce electric vehicle. The Luce is notable not just for being Ferrari’s first EV, but for being designed in collaboration with Jony Ive and Mark Newson at their collective LoveFrom. It’s also going to be Ferrari’s second four-door car and its first five-seat one.

We already knew Ive and Newson were working on the Luce’s interiors, which were shown off earlier this year. Now Ferrari says LoveFrom was allowed to “define the design direction of the project from the outset,” inside and out.

Previous Next

1 / 3 Image: Ferrari

Tim Stevens reporting for Engadget offers a few firsthand impressions of the car, which he describes as feeling more like an SUV than a traditional sports car. He wasn’t able to try out fully functioning interior controls or get a test drive, but he notes that with four motors and 1,035 horsepower, it ought to be set up for success. He did offer praise for the car’s sound, which apparently picks up and amplifies vibrations from the rear motors instead of being fully synthesized like many EVs. And he mentions that while there’s no US price set, it will start at €550,000 in Italy, making it the most expensive Ferrari yet.