The ultra-luxury sedan market is shrinking, and with Bentley discontinuing the Mulsanne and the W12 engine gone, the Flying Spur now carries the entire British marque’s sedan legacy on its own, competing in a segment being steadily absorbed by luxury SUVs.
Announced earlier today, this latest iteration of the fourth-gen Flying Spur introduces the most significant exterior refresh the model has seen in years, brings back the performance-focused S variant, and adds the Naim for Mulliner audio system through the new Virtuoso Collection. The full range spans five variants: Flying Spur, Azure, S, Speed, and the flagship Mulliner.

But it is the Flying Spur S that leads the new model that continues to be powered by the brand’s class-leading V8 hybird. Its High Performance Hybrid powertrain produces 671 horsepower and 686 pound-feet of torque, which Bentley claims is nearly 20 percent more than any previous Flying Spur S.
From a standstill, it can hit 60 mph in 3.6 seconds and tops out at 191 mph. Bentley's Performance Active Chassis combines Active All-Wheel Drive, twin-valve dampers, torque vectoring across all axes, the 48V Bentley Dynamic Ride active anti-roll system, and, for the first time on a Flying Spur S, an electronic limited-slip differential.
<- Gallery ->
The most visually significant exterior change on this fourth-generation model is the move away from the pre-facelift Flying Spur’s distinctive twin oval headlamps to a single "focused eye" unit on each side, a design detail absent from a Bentley sedan since 1962 that brings the Flying Spur's front end in line with the current Continental GT coupe. Each headlamp is an oval form with a sharply defined straight upper edge and crystalline LED detailing inside the housing.
The radiator grille now integrates into the front bumper, the wing vent detail has been dropped in favor of a cleaner front wing, and badging now sits further down, behind the front wheel. At the rear, revised tail lamps illuminate to display a sharper Bentley "B" graphic. A new color, Dark Teal, joins a palette now exceeding 80 finishes. Both the Azure and S models can be specified with new 22-inch wheel finishes as an optional extra.
Inside, five seat styles are available, each requiring 12 hours of hand craftsmanship. The Touchscreen Remote, a removable wireless rear tablet, gives rear passengers independent control over audio, climate, and massage functions. The Virtuoso Collection's Naim for Mulliner audio system features 21 speakers derived from Focal's Grand Utopia technology, originally developed for the coachbuilt Batur at £25,000 (~$32k).
The modern-day Flying Spur was introduced in 2005 and once held the title of fastest sedan in the world during the W12 era. This fourth generation makes that argument on hybrid power alone, and does so convincingly.
Bentley has not released U.S. pricing for the refreshed model at the time of publication. However, the outgoing model carried a starting MSRP above $250,000, providing a reasonable baseline for where this generation is likely to land. That positions it above the Mercedes-Maybach S 680 at around $215,000 and below the Rolls-Royce Ghost Black Badge at approximately $380,000.
For those who find SUVs too obvious and the sedan market too sparse, the new Flying Spur continues to make a strong case for itself. Customers can configure the car today, with first deliveries scheduled for early Q4 2026 and production beginning at Bentley's Crewe factory in September.
View All Bentley Flying Spurs for Sale
Images: Bentley