Nissan Australia has confirmed the final V8-powered Patrol destined for local showrooms will roll off the production line in Japan within about two months, with the next-generation large off-road SUV following the Toyota LandCruiser 300 Series in switching to twin-turbocharged V6 power (albeit petrol not diesel).

In its first formal acknowledgement of the long-running V8 Patrol’s demise, Nissan Australia said the final builds of its Y62 Patrol – which uses a naturally aspirated 5.6-litre V8 petrol engine producing 298kW of power and 560Nm of torque – will take place in August 2026.

It will be replaced by the seventh-generation Y63 Patrol, which is due in to arrive in Australia before the end of this year with a twin-turbo petrol V6. US-market models produce up to 338kW and 700Nm.

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A Nissan spokesperson told CarExpert the August production deadline means the final shipments of V8 Patrols are expected to arrive in Australia in September, potentially extending into early October, and that customers wishing to choose specific paint colours and features should act quickly.

The company also confirmed the locally developed Patrol Warrior – of which around 5200 examples have been built by Nissan Australia’s Melbourne-based engineering partner Premcar since its launch in 2023 – “will wrap up shortly after”.

Nissan told CarExpert it will not offer a special-edition send-off model, with the existing Ti, Ti-L and Patrol Warrior variants – priced at $95,500, $107,100 and $110,660 before on-road costs respectively – remaining available until the Y62’s end.