Range Rover walks back the all-touchscreen interior
© landrover.com
Range Rover is updating its flagship SUV for the new model year: some of the physical controls are returning to the cabin. This is not a full rollback to the old layout, but the driver will once again get familiar elements where the touchscreen turned out to be less than convenient.
In 2021, Range Rover had separate round dials below the centre screen, and buttons for volume and drive modes sat next to the transmission selector. In 2023, those elements were removed in favour of the Pivi Pro digital interface. Now part of the control set is back: the volume knob and a second rotary controller for drive modes are available again. Climate control, however, still lives inside the screen, although its zones are now positioned closer to the edges of the display.
In Europe, the new Range Rover starts at 155,129 euros. For that money you get the P460e plug-in hybrid in SE trim. The long-wheelbase version starts at 167,055 euros. At the other end of the range sits the SV Ultra with the V8 P540 — this SUV is priced at 406,417 euros.
Another important piece of news — a fully electric Range Rover. According to the source, the car has already been shown to potential customers, and orders are expected to open later in 2026. Even premium brands are starting to give drivers back physical controls in places where touchscreens feel questionable.
This English edition was prepared using AI translation under editorial oversight by SpeedMe. The original reporting is by Yulia Ivanchik