The boss of Porsche has told German media the automaker is looking to maintain profits with fewer, more exclusive models rather than needing higher sales to make money – putting a new three-row SUV in doubt.

Speaking to Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, CEO Michael Leiters said: “We are planning for lower capacities in the future.”

“Porsche has to make money even with fewer cars,” he added.

The Porsche boss, now in his second stint at the German brand after more than a decade at Ferrari and McLaren, said the Porsche he returned to was a much larger company where costs had “spiralled out of control”.

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Porsche suffered a 10 per cent decline in global sales in 2025, posting 279,449 deliveries compared to 310,718 the previous year.

In 2023, the brand set its current sales record of 320,221 vehicles, something Mr Leiters appears to have no interest in breaking.

Instead, Porsche plans to reduce capacity to be closer in line with global demand.

The company will focus on more profitable models rather than volume sellers, as well as ultra-low-volume special editions such as the 90-unit 911 GT3 90 F.A. Porsche and ‘Sonderwunsch’ special-request one-off models.