$4.3M 2027 Bugatti Tourbillon Revealed! Start the Clock!
Bugatti’s hybrid V-16-powered Chiron replacement aims for more than just massive numbers.Secretly shuttled around the globe and tucked away in places like a powerplant-turned-underground-techno-club on the wrong side of what’s left of the Berlin Wall—or in a generic warehouse among shipping containers in industrial Los Angeles—sits a car that Bugatti-Rimac has built its future around. Named for an intricate wristwatch mechanism that also happens to be the French word for “whirlwind,” this new hypercar promises to bridge the gap between the gas-guzzling Bugatti Chirons of yesterday and the electron-eating Rimac Nevera-like electric supercars of tomorrow. With 1,775 hp coming courtesy of a plug-in hybrid system consisting of a new homebrew V-16 combustion engine and three-electric motors, a top speed surpassing 275 mph, and a multimillion-dollar price tag—about $4.3 million, to be more precise—befitting of the bleeding-edge technology stuffed inside, the new 2027 Bugatti Tourbillon aims to help the company leap toward its inevitable electric era.
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Big Shoes to Fill
Following up 2016’s Chiron won’t be easy. While it never had the cultural impact of the 2005 Veyron, the Chiron was arguably better in every way than its mid-aughts predecessor. With 1,479 horsepower and 1,180 lb-ft of torque on tap in its base form, the Chiron was a sharper, better-handling, and more comfortable Veyron. It was still mega fast, too. By the end of its life, the Chiron’s Veyron-based 8.0-liter quad-turbo W-16 engine had been massaged to produce 1,578 hp, and a modified Chiron Super Sport managed to hit a claimed top speed of 304 mph on a unidirectional run.
The Veyron, on the other hand, was unquestionably the fastest car of its day. It was willed into production by late Volkswagen chief Ferdinand Piëch, who allegedly wanted a car with at least 1,000 hp, a 400-kph (248.5-mph) top speed, and the ability to drive directly from the racetrack to the opera. The Veyron singlehandedly relaunched what was an obscure Franco-German brand that had been dormant since a short-lived ’90s reboot. Before that, more than half a century had passed since the company produced anything of note, such as the storied Type 57SC, of which only a small handful were built before World War II.
What a return to glory the Veyron was. In our 2005 First Test, it zipped from 0 to 60 mph in a still-staggering 2.7 seconds and on through the quarter mile in 10.4 seconds at 139.9 mph. Later, at a German test track, we piloted one to its top speed of 253.2 mph. Yet somehow the Veyron’s cultural cachet (“Paris Hilton with all-wheel drive,” as we dubbed it) was even larger than its performance capabilities. It appeared in countless music videos, it could reliably be found stationed on Beverly Hill’s ritzy Rodeo Drive, and you couldn’t spot a red carpet in the ’00s that didn’t prominently feature at least one. The Chiron, for all its progress, just didn’t have the same impact.
Now part of Bugatti Rimac, a 55/45 joint venture between Rimac and Porsche, it’s with that history and the electrified future in mind that new company chair Mate Rimac launches the Tourbillon.





