There are two kinds of people in this world. Those who think a Lamborghini should be low enough to scrape every speed bump in existence and loud enough to wake the neighbours three villages away. And then there are those who secretly adore the idea of carrying four people, a week’s worth of luggage and a Labrador while still embarrassing supercars at the traffic lights. The Urus was built for the second group, although the first eventually admitted it wasn’t half bad either. Now Lamborghini has done something that would once have sounded like sacrilege. It has taken its outrageous Super SUV, plugged it into a charger, filled it with batteries, given it more computers than the Apollo programme and somehow made it even faster. On paper, that shouldn’t work. Yet here we are. The new Urus SE Performante is proof that electrification doesn’t have to dull the senses. In true Lamborghini fashion, it simply turns the volume up even further.

Let’s begin with the important numbers because, frankly, they’re absurd. The Urus SE Performante produces 812 CV and 1,000 Nm of torque, courtesy of a familiar 4.0-litre twin turbocharged V8 working alongside an electric motor. That’s 146 horsepower more than the previous Performante, which is rather like saying Mount Everest has been made slightly taller.
The result? 0 to 100 km/h in just 3.3 seconds, 0 to 200 km/h in 10.8 seconds, before eventually reaching 312 km/h. Think about that for a moment. This is an SUV. It has doors big enough for adults, a boot large enough for golf clubs, and yet it can chase down cars that were once bedroom poster material. And when you’re not pretending to be a racing driver, it’ll quietly glide along on electric power alone for more than 60 kilometres, which is wonderfully civilised until you remember it’s still a Lamborghini.
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The trouble with many hybrids is that they feel like they’ve attended too many corporate meetings. They’re efficient, sensible and about as emotionally engaging as an office printer. Not this one. Lamborghini has paired its twin turbo V8 with a permanent magnet electric motor positioned ahead of an extensively recalibrated eight-speed automatic gearbox. The electric motor doesn’t merely improve efficiency; it fills every tiny gap in acceleration, making the entire powertrain feel permanently caffeinated. The 25.9 kWh battery, cleverly hidden beneath the load floor, helps lower the centre of gravity while providing instant electric punch whenever your right foot demands it. It is less about saving fuel and far more about making physics surrender.
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Normally, something weighing well over two tonnes ought to lean through bends like an ageing cruise ship. Apparently Lamborghini didn’t receive that memo. The headline innovation is the new AURA dual chamber air suspension, which reduces body roll by almost fifty per cent while cutting cabin vibrations by a quarter compared with the previous Performante.
In simple English, it corners flatter, rides better and somehow makes an SUV behave like something with half its height. There’s also a dedicated Rally mode, because naturally someone at Lamborghini thought owners might occasionally want to throw an INR 3 crore (approx.) Super SUV sideways across loose gravel. It joins Strada, Sport, Corsa and EV mode, allowing the Urus to switch personalities faster than a Hollywood actor.

Lamborghini has never been accused of subtlety, and thankfully the Urus SE Performante continues that tradition. The bonnet is entirely new, sculpted from exposed carbon fibre with a muscular central power dome that proudly announces there’s something very serious happening underneath.
The front bumper features larger air intakes that genuinely improve cooling rather than simply looking aggressive, while almost every angle of the car has been sharpened, widened or made more dramatic. The 23-inch Y-spoke wheels fill the arches beautifully, while carbon fibre extends across the bonnet, wheel arches, spoiler and countless other surfaces. The rear diffuser is now the largest ever fitted to an Urus, looking as though it could comfortably swallow a small hatchback whole. Even the rear design pays tribute to the legendary Countach through Lamborghini’s signature hexagonal design language. It’s theatrical. It’s unapologetic. And thankfully, it’s unmistakably Lamborghini.

Step inside and you’ll quickly realise Lamborghini still has absolutely no interest in boring interiors. Everything revolves around the driver. A pair of 12.3-inch displays dominate the cabin, one serving as the digital instrument cluster while the other controls the latest Lamborghini Infotainment System with graphics borrowed from the Revuelto. The air vents feature beautifully machined Y-shaped aluminium detailing, while new upholstery and an aviation-inspired switch panel reinforce Lamborghini’s long-standing “Feel Like A Pilot” philosophy. Even the steering wheel receives an exclusive carbon fibre surround, because if you’re spending this much money, your hands deserve something rather more interesting than ordinary leather.

The Urus has always been a contradiction that somehow made perfect sense. It combined the practicality of an SUV with the outrageous personality of a Lamborghini, proving that family cars need not be dull and performance machines need not be impractical. The new Urus SE Performante simply raises the stakes. By embracing hybrid technology, Lamborghini has not diluted the experience; it has sharpened it. More power, greater precision, improved comfort and astonishing efficiency now exist within a machine that still looks as though it has escaped from a motor show concept stand. It remains loud when you want it to be, civilised when it needs to be, and devastatingly fast at every opportunity. If this is Lamborghini’s vision of the electrified future, then perhaps the age of hybrid performance isn’t something enthusiasts should fear after all. It is something they should look forward to.