Lamborghini Revuelto Review — The First 1,000HP Lamborghini Honors the V12 Legacy
Official press image of the Lamborghini Revuelto. | © Automobili Lamborghini
The Aventador's V12 was always going to be a difficult act to follow — and Lamborghini's answer was to make it even louder, even more powerful, and electrified for the first time in the brand's history. The Revuelto is Lamborghini's flagship super sports car, the first Lamborghini to break 1,000 horsepower, and the first time the company's iconic naturally-aspirated V12 has been paired with all-wheel drive. This is whether hybridizing the most emotional engine in the lineup actually made the flagship better, or simply different.
The Lamborghini Revuelto is for the buyer who wants the brand's flagship V12 experience with genuinely modern performance credentials — over 1,000 horsepower, all-wheel-drive traction, and a silent electric-only mode for navigating city traffic. It is for buyers who value continuity with Lamborghini's V12 heritage while still wanting cutting-edge hybrid technology rather than a purely analogue experience. It is not for the purist who specifically wants the unfiltered, naturally-aspirated V12 sound of the Aventador with no hybrid intervention whatsoever — for that experience, only the used market for the outgoing car remains. But for buyers who want Lamborghini's most complete, most capable V12 flagship ever built, the Revuelto delivers exactly that.
Unveiled in Lamborghini's 60th anniversary year, the Revuelto carries enormous symbolic weight as the successor to the Aventador — a car that, in its various forms, defined the brand's flagship V12 super sports car for over a decade. Rather than simply updating that formula, Lamborghini built what it calls a High Performance Electrified Vehicle, or HPEV: the first time the company's V12 has been paired with plug-in hybrid technology, and the first time a 12-cylinder Lamborghini has used a dual-clutch transmission instead of a traditional automated manual.
CEO Stephan Winkelmann has called the Revuelto "a milestone in the history of Lamborghini," describing it as a unique and innovative car that remains faithful to the brand's DNA, with the V12 standing as an iconic symbol of Lamborghini's super sports heritage and history. That framing matters — Lamborghini was careful to position the Revuelto as a continuation of the V12 bloodline rather than its replacement, an important distinction for a brand whose entire flagship identity is tied to that engine.
At the heart of the Revuelto is an entirely new 6.5-litre naturally-aspirated V12, producing 814 horsepower on its own at a remarkable specific output of 127 horsepower per litre. Three electric motors supplement that combustion output: two front axial-flux motors providing all-wheel drive and genuine electric torque vectoring, plus a radial-flux motor integrated above the new eight-speed dual-clutch transmission — itself a first for a 12-cylinder Lamborghini, replacing the automated single-clutch gearboxes used on every V12 Lamborghini before it.
Combined system output reaches 1,001 horsepower (1,015 CV), making the Revuelto the first Lamborghini in the brand's history to break the 1,000-horsepower barrier. A 3.8kWh lithium-ion battery, housed within the transmission tunnel in the centre of the chassis, powers the electric side of the system — including a fully electric Città driving mode for near-silent, zero-emission city driving, with an EPA-estimated range of approximately 6 miles.
With Revuelto we take the experience of driving a Lamborghini to a superior level. Our objective right from the start was to confirm it at the very summit of driving emotions.
— Rouven Mohr, Chief Technical Officer, Automobili LamborghiniLamborghini quotes 0-62mph (0-100km/h) in just 2.5 seconds and a top speed exceeding 217mph (350km/h). What's genuinely new is the all-wheel-drive system itself — the first time a V12 Lamborghini has sent power to all four wheels, with the front axial-flux motors enabling real electric torque vectoring and, notably, all-wheel drive available even in the car's fully electric driving mode. Lamborghini credits the carbon-fibre-intensive construction with achieving the best weight-to-power ratio in the company's history, at 1.75kg per horsepower (CV).
Bridgestone developed bespoke Potenza Sport run-flat tyres specifically for the Revuelto, available in two staggered fitments depending on configuration. The car's active aerodynamics system — Lamborghini's ALA (Aerodinamica Lamborghini Attiva) — is claimed to be 80 percent lighter than conventional hydraulic active-aero systems, working alongside an active rear spoiler that generates more downforce than the outgoing Aventador's equivalent system.
| Engine | 6.5L naturally-aspirated V12 + 3 electric motors |
| Combined Output | 1,001 hp (1,015 CV) / 534 lb-ft |
| V12-Only Output | 814 hp (127 hp/litre) |
| Battery | 3.8 kWh lithium-ion |
| EV-Only Range | ~6 miles (Città mode) |
| Drive | All-wheel drive — first V12 Lamborghini AWD |
| Transmission | 8-speed dual-clutch (first on a V12 Lamborghini) |
| 0-62 mph | 2.5 seconds |
| Top Speed | 217+ mph (350+ km/h) |
| Weight-to-Power Ratio | 1.75 kg/CV (best in Lamborghini history) |
| Seating | 2-seat |
| US Starting Price | $608,358 |
| Battery Warranty | 8 years / 100,000 miles |
| Standard Vehicle Warranty | 3 years, unlimited miles |
The Revuelto introduces what Lamborghini calls an entirely new design language while still tying back to the brand's legendary V12 cars, particularly the 1971 Countach prototype that first established the marque's pure, Space Age proportions. New Y-shaped daytime running lights at the front and matching Y-shaped taillights at the rear create a distinctive light signature, while a completely exposed engine bay — visually comparable to hypercars like the Bugatti Chiron — puts the V12 itself on display behind the cabin, with hexagonal exhaust tips integrated directly into the rear spoiler design.
Lamborghini's Head of Design Mitja Borkert has described the Revuelto as "adrenaline made visible," with the philosophy of "feel like a pilot" extending throughout a cabin built around a lightweight Y-shaped dashboard and centre console. Inside, an entirely new Human Machine Interface spans three displays — a 12.3-inch instrument cluster, an 8.4-inch central touchscreen, and an additional 9.1-inch display — all managed by a single technological architecture for consistent graphics and interaction across every screen.
The Revuelto succeeds at the hardest job Lamborghini could have given it — taking the brand's most emotionally important engine, the naturally-aspirated V12, and making it genuinely more capable without losing what made it special in the first place. Breaking 1,000 horsepower is a real milestone, the all-wheel-drive system delivers traction the rear-drive Aventador never had, and the exposed engine bay keeps the V12's theatre front and centre rather than hiding the hybridization behind closed bodywork. It costs more than the V8 Temerario and trades some of the Aventador's unfiltered character for genuine technological sophistication. But as a statement of what a hybridized V12 flagship can be when built with real conviction, the Revuelto is a triumph — and a worthy successor to one of the most important engines in Lamborghini's history.
The Revuelto carries more symbolic weight than almost any other car Lamborghini has built — replacing the Aventador, and with it, a decade of V12 history, is no small task. What's genuinely impressive is how confidently Lamborghini leaned into hybridization rather than treating it as a necessary evil, building a car that's faster, more capable, and arguably more emotionally compelling than the car it replaces.
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