Skip to main content

McLaren Reintroduces a Three-Seater Supercar with the Speedtail

McLaren Speedtail

Almost three decades ago, McLaren turned the supercar world on its head. Not only did the mighty McLaren F1 break what seemed like the laws of physics in terms of performance, but it gave owners the opportunity to bring along a second friend for triple-digit romps. Even though the F1’s three-abreast seating was hugely popular, the seating arrangement didn’t return when McLaren reinvented itself a decade ago. Until now. We give you the McLaren Speedtail.

The Speedtail is McLaren’s idea of a hyper grand tourer, a 1,035-horsepower, 250-mph hybrid hypercar that takes aim at the respective grand touring crowns worn by Bugatti’s Chiron and Koenigsegg’s Regera — A scalpel made of leather, carbon fiber, gasoline, and engineering. Whereas the McLaren Senna was designed to dominate every racetrack built, the Speedtail is a straight-line monster with the goal of taking the driver and their passengers from London to Lisbon in record-setting time.

The Speedtail is centered around the McLaren’s all-new Monocage carbon fiber monocoque chassis. A bespoke iteration of the brand’s safety cell, the new design allowed McLaren to center the driver, who is then flanked by each passenger — exactly the same method used in the original F1. Behind the cabin, McLaren hasn’t quite detailed what engine powers the Speedtail, but it’s more than likely it’s some form of the brand’s 4.0-liter twin-turbocharged V-8 found in the Senna and 720S, and a hybrid motor similar to the one found in McLaren’s P1. And, as mentioned, the Speedtail has 1,035 horsepower propelling you to truly ludicrous speeds. However, it’s most eye-watering metric is how quick the Speedtail hits 186 mph: 12.8 seconds. If proven true, and we have no reason to doubt McLaren, that would make the Speedtail literally the quickest accelerating car ever.

Now that power and acceleration are out of the way, the Speedtail is dripping with bleeding-edge tech and wild aerodynamics. First off, it has bendable carbon fiber. At the back of the Speedtail are two ailerons, the sort of kit you get with your plane. However, unlike a plane, where the ailerons have denoted shut lines and pivot points, the Speedtail’s don’t. They’re blended into the rear aerostructure and can bend thanks to a new form of pliable carbon fiber. The Speedtail also receives retractable door cameras that take the place of mirrors. As you go faster, the cameras retreat into the body structure and reduce the car’s overall drag.

Inside, that sort of 2158 A.D. tech continues with milled carbon fiber, electrochromic glass, directional leather to keep you better stabilized in the seats, and a roof-mounted starter to give you the full fighter pilot feel.

McLaren also worked with Pirelli to build a better tire, because, at 250 mph, you really want something connecting you to the road that’s not going to fail.

McLaren’s CEO Mike Flewitt stated, “McLaren has never built a vehicle like the Speedtail before. As our first ‘Hyper-GT’, the Speedtail is the ultimate McLaren road car; a fusion of art and science that combines an astonishing maximum speed with an iconic central-driving position and a truly pioneering approach to bespoke personalization. A ground-breaking hybrid powertrain sits within a lightweight carbon fiber body reminiscent of sleek ‘streamliners’ that once set world speed records, while the luxurious three-seat cockpit offers a sublime combination of an incredible driving experience, unmatched individualism and innovative materials never seen before in a road-going vehicle.”

McLaren will only build 106 Speedtails, the same number of cars the company built of the F1, and each will carry a starting price of $2.3 million. There are just a few problems though. They’ve all been spoken for and U.S. buyers will have to go through a handful of legal loopholes to get them licensed and insured as the Speedtail doesn’t quite meet U.S. regulations. That said, if you have $2.3 million to drop on one, you likely have the means to figure out how to drive it in the U.S. as well.

Editors' Recommendations

Jonathon Klein
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Jonathon is a former contributor to The Manual. Please reach out to The Manual editorial staff with any questions or comments…
Fun in the sun with limited edition 2024 Jeep Beach Wrangler and Gladiator
Join the fun in Daytona during Jeep Beach week
2024 Jeep Wrangler 4xe Beach and 2024 Jeep Gladiator Beach limited-run editions parked on an ocean beach.

Jeep recently dropped two special limited edition models to commemorate Jeep Beach Week 2024. This annual celebration for Jeep fans will last 9 days this year, from Friday, April 19 to Sunday, April 28. The 2024 Wrangler 4xe Jeep Beach and 2024 Gladiator Jeep Beach special editions are both available for order this month.
Why the Jeep Beach editions matter

Previous

Read more
How much does a Formula 1 car weigh?
F1 cars will be smaller and lighter in 2026
Max Verstappen driving a Red Bull F1 race car.

F1 racing is bound by strict rules from the FIA that set a minimum limit on how much a Formula 1 car weighs. Before each racing season, three volumes of FIA F1 Regulations set the parameters for technical, sporting, and financial operations for F1 teams, including the drivers and cars.

The minimum weight for F1 cars will change starting with the 2026 season (more on that below in this article), but for the F1 2024 and 2025 schedules, the official minimum weight for an F1 car is 798 kilograms (1,759.29 pounds). Read on to learn why the regulations list a minimum weight, not a maximum.
Why F1 car weight matters

Read more
CEO says Hennessey has to solve this issue before Venom F5 can win speed record
Hennessey's Venom F5 needs a venue for its speed record attempt
Jon Hennessey standing in front of a Venom F5

John Hennessey is one of the automotive world’s true characters, up there with the likes of Peter Wheeler and Enzo Ferrari when it comes to crazy, ambitious ideas that somehow keep panning out. His latest endeavor involves breaking the production vehicle speed record again. This time, Hennessey would like to do it in a car his company has designed from the ground up.

That car is the Venom F5, and it’s designed to do more than go fast in a straight line. Hennessey sees it as the “decathlete of hypercars,” so you can expect to see it setting the standard in all manner of events. Recently, it set the production car lap record at COTA -- beating a time set by the Czinger C21 and rounding the circuit a whole seven seconds faster than the McLaren P1.

Read more