Currently reading: Jensen Interceptor reborn as V8-powered luxury GT due next year

New car has been created by restomod firm Jensen International Automotive and will be built in Oxfordshire

The Jensen Interceptor is to be reborn as a new British-built, V8-powered GT, 50 years after production of the iconic original ended.

It has been created by Banbury-based Jensen International Automotive (JIA), the engineering firm that specialises in restoring and modernising Interceptors, creating restomods such as the Interceptor R.

This new muscle car is JIA's first clean-sheet design and creation and will arrive next year. It will be hand-built in “ultra-low” numbers and therefore probably command a very high price.

It's claimed to be an “ultra-high-performance”, luxury proposition that will offer a fully analogue driving experience. 

This suggests that it will use a manual gearbox and the cabin will be flooded with physical controls and switches, similar to the original 1960s Interceptor.

While further details have yet to be revealed, Autocar understands the new car will be powered by the engine from the latest Chevrolet Corvette.

The Corvette’s 6.2-litre V8 puts out 495bhp and 452lb ft of torque as standard, but JIA said its new car's powertrain will be “bespoke”.

The original Interceptor used a 6.3-litre big-block Chrysler V8, giving it more than 250bhp and a top speed of nearly 140mph.

The as-yet-unnamed JIA GT will sit on a lightweight aluminium chassis, likely as part of an effort to give it the highest power-to-weight ratio possible.

While its design has yet to be revealed, the first official picture confirms that it will follow a similar philosophy to the original, with a long bonnet, raked roofline and a low-slung stance.

Managing director David Duerden said JIA is “taking the theme of the luxury British GT to fresh, thoroughly modern heights” with a car that “will stand proudly as a completely all-new car in its own right”.

A release date has yet to be confirmed but, given that JIA is keen to highlight the car’s British roots, a debut at the Goodwood Festival of Speed in July seems plausible.

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Will Rimell

Will Rimell Autocar
Title: News editor

Will is Autocar's news editor.​ His focus is on setting Autocar's news agenda, interviewing top executives, reporting from car launches, and unearthing exclusives.

As part of his role, he also manages Autocar Business – the brand's B2B platform – and Haymarket's aftermarket publication CAT.

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xxxx 14 January 2026

Final specs might prove interesting 'cause it looks crazy long.

Peter Cavellini 14 January 2026

Erm currently watching a reboot of Inspector Liniley on the BBC and guess what? Yep this young chap is driving an old Interceptor I think, I just can't see how a car that looks like this can be restomoded into an ultra fast car their words not mine, it just doesn't look like it should be driven fast, yes I love the vintage interior the burr walnut and smiths dials, the glass hatch at the rear was novel at the time and that big bellowing Chrysler engine was a great sound too,but limited build updated probably a silly price also? ,eh, no thanks.

scrap 14 January 2026

I'll always wish the best of luck to any UK manufacturer, but this image doesn't seem reminiscent of the original Interceptor at all.