The new Rolls-Royce Project Nightingale, a limited-run electric convertible, is the first in a new range of ultra-exclusive models from the Goodwood-based firm that, it says, will spark a change in how it designs cars forever.
The 100 examples of the new two-seater will be the first products of Rolls’ new Coachbuild Collection. Each of the 100 EVs will be priced from around £7 million but the final cost is likely to be significantly higher due to extensive customisation.
Rolls plans to launch a range of limited-run cars with bespoke designs and a high level of personalisation options under the Coachbuild Collection banner, with new arrivals every two to three years.
The Coachbuild Collection models will sit between the series-production one-offs, such as last year’s Phantom Goldfinger, and the ultra-exclusive full Coachbuild models, such as 2021’s three-off £20m Boat Tail.
All of the Project Nightingale models – not the car’s final name – are already accounted for, with owners chosen by the firm.

“We’re only talking to our best clients here,” said head of future products Phil Harnett. “We want to find proper homes for them, with the people who appreciate this and want to drive them. We are making sure every single one of those clients is the right person and they are people who are going to hold on to that car.”
Testing of the new model will begin this summer ahead of first deliveries in 2028. Although it is still a concept, Rolls claims Project Nightingale is 99% production ready.
The drop-top is a modern-day interpretation of the 17EX Torpedo, a streamlined touring coachwork test chassis of the 1928 Phantom I. Like that car, much of its length (at 5.76m the new car is as long as the flagship Phantom) is devoted to the long tail.
The design also points to a refreshed look for the brand under the direction of former BMW design boss Domagoj Dukec, who moved within the BMW Group to join Rolls in 2024. “It will shape everything that follows,” he said.
While the model is based on the same Art of Luxury platform as the rest of the brand’s range, Rolls says most of its parts are unique and insists that it shares little with the smaller Spectre, the company’s first electric car.



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Just because you can, doesn't mean that you should.
It is a concept which maybe only Rolls-Royce can make work, it is unquestionably luxurious and super-exclusive, and I wish it every success. For myself, I really like the V12 models. I'd love a Dawn one day, and electricity isn't my bag. I would accept however that at the level in the market occupied by R-R, electric works, because it's always going to be available and fully charged ready to go.
Good luck to Rolls Royce. I don't understand the market for cars like these, but if you can bank c. £800m on a run of 100 cars, why wouldn't you?