Electric GT 4-Door Coupé majors on driver engagement with mega power, engine note and simulated gearbox
The new Mercedes-AMG GT 4-Door Coupé is the performance brand's first dedicated EV – and its most powerful model to date.
Due on sale in the UK in September from around £150,000, the new electric performance saloon line-up will be led by the GT 63, which can sprint from 0-62mph in just 2.4sec and hit a top speed of 186mph, thanks to 1169bhp and 1475lb ft of torque.
What's it like to drive? Find out here
The low-slung Porsche Taycan and Lotus Emeya rival was previewed by two concepts, 2022's Vision AMG and 2025's GT XX, and its design has clearly been evolved from those.

It's the first model to be underpinned by the new electric AMG.EA platform, also set to be adopted by a super-SUV currently in development at the firm's Affalterbach HQ.
At 5.94m long, 1.96m wide and 1.4im tall with a 3.0m wheelbase, the new GT 4-Door Coupé is slightly longer and taller but narrower than the Taycan.
Kerb weight is quoted at 2460kg, although AMG claims the low mounting position and compact electric motors combine for a significantly lower centre of gravity than the original petrol-engined GT 4-Door Coupé of 2018 had.
Next-gen motors
The new car's powertrain features three axial-flux motors developed with Yasa, the Oxford-based motor specialist owned by Mercedes-Benz, alongside the AMG High Performance Powertrain division in Brixworth. They are manufactured at a dedicated facility in Berlin.
Their adoption represents a major departure from the radial-flux motors used in existing Mercedes EVs. Instead of electromagnetic flow running perpendicular to the motor shaft, it runs parallel, allowing a flatter, disc-like construction.
This allows for more compact packaging. Each rear motor measures around 80mm wide, while the front motor is slightly larger, at around 90mm wide.

Two motors are mounted within the car's rear axle assembly and one at the front, providing fully variable four-wheel drive with torque vectoring across the rear axle.
The rear motors rev to 13,000rpm, while the front motor is capable of extending to 15,000rpm.
The two rear motors are paired with a compact single-speed planetary gearbox, while silicon-carbide inverters manage energy flow under high load.
The front motor operates as a boost unit, engaging only when required and disconnecting under lighter loads to reduce drag.
In the entry-level GT 55, the trio combine to produce 816bhp and 1328lb ft, while the GT 63 raises output to 1169bhp and 1475lb ft. That's significantly more than direct rivals such as the Porsche Taycan Turbo GT (1093bhp and 9881b ft) and Lotus Emeya 900 Sport (905bhp and 726lb ft).

It also eclipses the punchiest version of the original GT 4-Door Coupé, the GT 63 S E Performance, which delivered 831bhp and 1084lb ft from a V8-engined plug-in hybrid powertrain.
Beyond peak figures, AMG has emphasised sustained output, claiming the GT 63 delivers maximum power for up to 63 seconds without thermal derating and never has less than 721bhp to use.
Energy is supplied by a newly developed 106kWh battery pack that features directly cooled cylindrical cells, each individually surrounded by a dielectric coolant to maintain stable operating temperatures.
This gives a range of up to 432 miles (in the car's most efficient GT 55 form) – 10 more than the Taycan with Performance Battery Plus.
Its 800V electrical system supports peak DC rapid-charging rates of more than 600kW, meaning around 286 miles of range can be added in 10 minutes.
The production model follows the GT XX concept, which completed almost 25,000 miles of running at the Nardò test track in Italy, setting multiple EV endurance and speed records in the process.

Driver engagement in an EV
AMG claims to have addressed the issue of driver engagement in EVs via a series of innovations.
Its new AMGForce system introduces a synthesised driving sound derived from the original GT 4-Door Coupé's V8, paired with haptic feedback through the seat structure.
There's also a simulated gearbox that's designed to replicate the characteristic of an AMG engine.
Control of the powertrain and chassis is handled by the AMG Race Engineer system, which links motor, braking and suspension functions.

Three rotary controllers on the centre console allow adjustment of the car's response, agility and traction by altering throttle behaviour, yaw characteristics and slip thresholds across a total of 729 settings.
As with other recent AMG models, the chassis adopts an AMG Active Ride Control suspension system combining three-chamber air springs with semi-active roll stabilisation.
Hydraulically interconnected dampers replace conventional anti-roll bars, continuously varying the roll stiffness within parameters set by the five drive modes, which include Race and Drift.
The four-link front and five-link rear suspension arrangements use forged aluminium components to reduce unsprung mass.
Meanwhile, rear-axle steering of up to six degrees aims to balance between low-speed agility and high-speed stability.
Braking is handled by carbon-ceramic discs at the front and steel discs at the rear, integrated with a energy recuperation system that can be adjusted via steering wheel paddles.
The cabin is covered in carbonfibre, metal and leather dominated by a 10.2in digital instrument cluster, a 14.0in infotainment touchscreen and a 14.0in passenger touchscreen.
Production of the new GT 4-Door Coupé will start in Sindelfingen this July.Â
