Currently reading: Porsche Panamera Sport Turismo estate revealed
Holding true to the 2012 Sport Turismo concept, a new four-plus-one seating layout and uniquely styled rear end are featured; first deliveries expected in October

The Porsche Panamera Sport Turismo has made its public debut at the Geneva motor show, seven months before the first cars arrive in Britain.

Set to make its public debut at next week’s Geneva motor show, the new sporty estate brings an added degree of practicality to the second-generation Porsche Panamera line-up with a new four-plus-one seating layout, a large electronically operated tailgate, a significantly lower loading lip and an extra 20 litres of boot space.

Read our review of the Porsche Panamera Turbo Sport Turismo

The new Panamera model was granted a production green-light by former Porsche chairman Matthias Müller following a positive reaction to the earlier Sport Turismo concept car unveiled at the 2012 Paris motor show.

Five years on, the first official photographs of the production version of the Sport Turismo reveal it holds true to the appearance of the earlier concept, with a uniquely styled rear end that helps to provide the Panamera with greater interior flexibility and load space in a move Porsche hopes will see it win over buyers who may have otherwise opted for a more conventional estate from rival car makers.

Credit for the styling of the new Porsche model goes to Mitja Borkert, who also penned the company’s all-electric Mission E concept and is now head of design at Lamborghini.

Panamerast 1101

The visual differences between the standard Panamera and the new Panamera Sport Turismo begin at the B-pillars, with a longer roof that extending backwards with less rake. The rear doors have also been modified to accommodate a larger glass area. The D-pillar is appreciably more upright, while the rear fenders have been modified accordingly.

At the rear, the new tailgate retains the same width as the liftback appendage used by the standard Panamera but owning to its increased height it offers a much larger loading aperture. The loading lip is also set lower, at bumper level, to ease the loading of heavy items.

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A complex active spoiler element mounted atop the tailgate at the rear serves to enhance the new estate’s aerodynamic properties. It deploys in three stages depending on speed and/or driving mode, generating additional downforce of up to 50kg at the rear axle.

Panamerast 1102

At speeds of up to 106mph, the spoiler remains in its retracted position with an angle of minus seven degrees, reducing overall drag and enhancing fuel economy. Above 106mph, the spoiler is automatically set in a so-called performance position with an angle of 1deg. When the driver chooses Sport or Sport Plus driving modes, the spoiler deploys into the performance position at a speed of 56mph.

When the Sport Turismo’s optional panoramic sliding roof is opened, the spoiler is automatically set to a position of 26 degrees to help minimise wind noise.

“The Panamera Sport Turismo is a step forwards into a new market segment, but it retains all of the values and attributes characteristic of Porsche,” says Michael Mauer, head of Porsche’s design operations.

At 5049mm in length, 1937mm in width and 1428mm in height, the Sport Turismo is same length and width but 5mm higher than the second-generation Panamera liftback. It also rides on the same 2950mm wheelbase as its established sibling.

Panamerast 1097

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The Sport Turismo is the first Panamera model offer seating for up to three in the rear, rather than just two as with the liftback. The two full-sized individual rear outer seats are accompanied by a narrow and raised central rear seat, boosting overall accommodation to five. The central rear seat is, however, compromised for leg space owing to the central tunnel running down the centre of the floorpan and really only designed to accommodate children.

Nevertheless, Porsche claims the added 5mm of roof height and less tumble home to the rear of the glasshouse not only provides for improved entry and exit to the rear over the liftback but also makes for greater head room for those seated in the rear.

Boot capacity is 520 litres, bigger than all other Panameras, the E-Hybrid Sport Turismo at 425 litres, and 20 litres more load capacity than the standard liftback. The backrests of the rear seats can automatically be folded down in a 40:20:40 configuration to extend overall load capacity to 1390 litres.

Panamerast 1095

A so-called luggage compartment management system is among a long list of options available for the new Porsche model. It uses two rails integrated into the floor of the boot, four lashing points and a partition net to secure items.  

At launch, the Panamera Sport Turismo will be offered in five different model variants: the Panamera 4, Panamera 4S, Panamera 4S Diesel, Panamera 4 E-Hybrid and Panamera Turbo – all of which are planned to be on display at the Geneva motor show, which opens its doors to the public on 8 March.

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Among the petrol powered models is the Panamera 4 Sport Turismo, which runs a turbocharged 3.0-litre V6 engine with 325bhp, while the Panamera 4S Sport Turismo receives a slightly smaller capacity twin-turbocharged 2.9-litre V6 powerplant producing 404bhp. Crowing the initial line-up is the Panamera Turbo Sport Turismo with a twin-turbocharged 4.0-litre V8 delivering 542bhp.

Porsche chairman Oliver Blume said "The Porsche Panamera Sport Turismo is a car that will take you to Nürburgring in the morning, the Eiffel mountains in the afternoon and home on the Autobahn with no problems at all. You can have a three-seat configuration in a Panamera for the first time in a 2+1 set-up."

The sole diesel model at launch is the Panamera 4S Diesel Sport Turismo, which receives a turbocharged 4.0-litre V8 engine with 416bhp. It is joined by the Panamera 4 E-Hybrid, whose driveline combines a turbocharged 2.9-litre V6 petrol engine with 325bhp and an electric motor mounted within the front section of the gearbox with 134bhp for an overall system output of 456bhp.

UK pricing for the Panamera Sport Turismo is yet to be announced, although Porsche confirms it will start at €97,557 for the the Panamera 4 Sport Turismo and extend to €158,604 for the initial range topping Panamera Turbo Sport Turismo in Germany.

Read more about the Geneva motor show here

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bowsersheepdog 2 March 2017

Estately progress

I'd prefer to see more glass at the sides, and a more squared off rear to maximize boot space, but the interior is excellent and it's great to see Porsche build an estate, especially one which is mainly fabulous, so I really hope they make lots more of them and dump the repulsive jeeps.
Supererogation 2 March 2017

Another day, another dinosaur...

Yet again an Autocar homage eulogising over an overweight, overwrought Teutonic behemoth. The world is moving on apace yet irrelevancies such as this dominate this once august 'publication'. In the real world away from the increasingly introverted and myopic viewpoint of the motoring sector this is an obsolete relic from the halcyon days of colossal corporate over-indulgence (and damn the long-term consequences) that fails to address any of the issues of how best to provide personal transport on a sustainable basis whilst managing to bring pleasure to the user.
Paul73 2 March 2017

[quote=Supererogation]Yet

Supererogation wrote:
Yet again an Autocar homage eulogising over an overweight, overwrought Teutonic behemoth. The world is moving on apace yet irrelevancies such as this dominate this once august 'publication'. In the real world away from the increasingly introverted and myopic viewpoint of the motoring sector this is an obsolete relic from the halcyon days of colossal corporate over-indulgence (and damn the long-term consequences) that fails to address any of the issues of how best to provide personal transport on a sustainable basis whilst managing to bring pleasure to the user.
Yet sales of luxury cars are maintained or growing, even with large petrol engines....I suspect they aren't yet quite as "irrelevant" as you suspect?
xxxx 2 March 2017

Yet, Not this one

Please read my earlier comment about falling sales for the Panamera
bomb 2 March 2017

[quote=Supererogation]Yet

Supererogation wrote:
Yet again an Autocar homage eulogising over an overweight, overwrought Teutonic behemoth. The world is moving on apace yet irrelevancies such as this dominate this once august 'publication'. In the real world away from the increasingly introverted and myopic viewpoint of the motoring sector this is an obsolete relic from the halcyon days of colossal corporate over-indulgence (and damn the long-term consequences) that fails to address any of the issues of how best to provide personal transport on a sustainable basis whilst managing to bring pleasure to the user.
Since humans are not robots we have emotional responses to things that we want, things that make us feel good. Need vs want doesn't really enter into this sort of transaction and I doubt the design brief extended to your list of requirements. Your dislike of this product, and others like it, does not render the product irrelevant unlike your curious comments on a forum for a magazine like Autocar.
scrap 2 March 2017

Actually, in most parts of

Actually, in most parts of Europe this is sadly irrelevant. I like the Panamera but at 5m long and 2m wide it is simply too big for many cities and roads. I appreciate that in USA this doesn't matter so much, but it does make you think about the sustainability of the car industry. For the accommodation it offers this is a very large car.
Cheltenhamshire 2 March 2017

Especially when the same

Especially when the same space and almost the same pace and handling is available in a smaller and cheaper package called the Cayenne. Seems like an odd vehicle to me.
RPF 2 March 2017

The Cayenne....

..has far less space ( especially of this new model) and handles nowhere near as well as a Panamera. It's also fugly and not everyone wants a behemoth Chelsea Tractor.
Cheltenhamshire 2 March 2017

[quote=RPF]..has far less

RPF wrote:
..has far less space ( especially of this new model) and handles nowhere near as well as a Panamera. It's also fugly and not everyone wants a behemoth Chelsea Tractor.
A behemoth that is smaller and lighter. They are both pretty darn fugly. And for the price of the Panamera you could have a Cayenne and a Boxster. Oh, the Cayenne seats 5. Adults. Like I said, strange car.
pSynrg 2 March 2017

[quote=Supererogation]...this

Supererogation wrote:
...this once august 'publication'...
Hey Mr Logic! Where've you been? I'd have one of these in a heartbeat, 90% because I'd know I'd be annoying people like you. 10% because I love it!
MaxTorque 3 March 2017

[quote=Supererogation]Yet

Supererogation wrote:
Yet again an Autocar homage eulogising over an overweight, overwrought Teutonic behemoth. The world is moving on apace yet irrelevancies such as this dominate this once august 'publication'. In the real world away from the increasingly introverted and myopic viewpoint of the motoring sector this is an obsolete relic from the halcyon days of colossal corporate over-indulgence (and damn the long-term consequences) that fails to address any of the issues of how best to provide personal transport on a sustainable basis whilst managing to bring pleasure to the user.
You must be referring to all the gas-guzzling LR turds out there that put even the challenger mbt to shame in terms of their outsized environmental impact. When it comes to irrelevance the Porsche panamera isn't a patch on these real behemoths.
xxxx 2 March 2017

Pictures don't lie.

Love the way there's no picture of the +1 seat in back so it's probably only for a lego man, anyway have to be carefully last time I mentioned what a waste of space and there not being a 5 seater I got trolled. Fuelled up some versions of this huge ugly tank come in at 2400kg will this be the first ever 'Sport' to hit 2500kg, what a way to waste £150,000. No wonder sales are falling
Paul73 2 March 2017

[quote=xxxx]No wonder sales

xxxx wrote:
No wonder sales are falling
Are they? Its highly likely that sales of the new Panamera are lower versus same time last year as they weren't yet released in USA and China in January....
xxxx 2 March 2017

Yep sales are falling

Paul73 wrote:
xxxx wrote:
No wonder sales are falling
Are they? Its highly likely that sales of the new Panamera are lower versus same time last year as they weren't yet released in USA and China in January....
In Europe for 2016 they're down 25% on what they were for 2015. To prove it wasn't a one-off in USA, in 2012 they where 7600 they've dropped year on year to 4400. Telsa are eating into it big time