The last Jaguar to use an internal combustion engine rolled off the production line in Solihull, England, last Friday as the company rebuilds itself as an electric vehicle-only brand.

The final vehicle was a black F-Pace SVR – powered by a 5.0-litre supercharged V8 petrol engine – which the Jaguar Enthusiasts Club said was given to the Jaguar Daimler Heritage Trust in Gaydon.

No official announcement was made by Jaguar after the final build, which brings an end to all petrol- and diesel-powered vehicles from the company, although Jaguar says it has enough F-Pace stock to carry it into 2026.

It follows the final builds of the XE, XF, E-Pace and electric I-Pace, as well as the F-Type sports car, since June 2024, with order books for its new GT model scheduled to open in mid-2026 ahead of customer deliveries in 2027.

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Part of the broader Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) group owned by Tata, Jaguar announced its bold plan to become an electric vehicle-only brand back in 2021.

Many rivals making similar announcements or planning to sell predominantly electric vehicles (EVs) at the time, such as Mercedes-Benz and Volvo, have since wound back previous goals following slower-than-expected EV uptake.

This has also seen a recent softening of the European Union’s plans to effectively ban the sale of new vehicles with internal combustion engines (ICE) by 2035, opening the door to continued ICE and hybrid sales.

Committed to its switch to EVs, Jaguar presented its first taste of its electric rebirth with the 2024 Type 00 Concept and accompanying logo and marketing changes, which attracted heavy criticism online.