Aston Martin to keep combustion cars on sale well into 2030s
The DB12 will be far from Aston Martin's final combustion car
There will “always be demand” for combustion-engined cars, according to Aston Martin executive chairman Lawrence Stroll, who has pledged to keep selling them for as long as he is legally allowed to.
Aston Martin recently pushed back its plans to launch its first electric car in 2025 to 2027 and has increased investments in plug-in hybrid technology accordingly.
Stroll expects plug-in hybrids to be far more than a 'bridging' technology and to remain on sale well into the middle of the 2030s and beyond. Aston customers have told dealers that they want “sounds and smells” and favour ICE technology for their cars, according to Stroll.
Aston's first EV
Aston Martin has developed a bespoke EV architecture and plans to launch four electric cars on it – a GT, SUV, crossover and ‘mid-engined’ supercar – but they won't hit the market before 2027 after a reveal of the first model in late 2026.
"We have designed and ready one platform to take four different vehicles," Stroll told Autocar. "We have all the products technically engineered and physically designed.
“We planned to launch at the end of 2025 and were ready to do so, but it seems there is a lot more hype in EVs, politically driven or whatever, than consumer demand, particularly at an Aston Martin price point."
He added that demand for electric cars is particularly weak in the luxury segments, as Aston Martins were typically not 'first' cars for their customers and used more for leisure.
Stroll said Aston "will get there" with electric cars, "but at the previously [stated] date, definitely not".
PHEV investment
In delaying the EVs, Stroll said Aston had "decided to invest very heavily in PHEVs" – technology, he said, that would "play out for a long while and we will have an extensive offering".