We Customized a $400,000 Continental GT Speed With Mulliner. Bentley Says It’ll Build It for Us
Bentley gave us an up-close and personal look at its customization process—and now it will make the car we specified and let us drive it.We’ve all been there. Bored at work, trying to kill a few hours before you get to go home, you pull up a car customization site to mess around on when your boss isn’t looking (hi, Erik!). But if you’re truly serious about customizing a car, you don’t do it on something as plebian as a screen. Ew. No, instead, you meet with a specialist in person. Most high-end automotive brands offer services like these, and for today’s story, Bentley invited us to meet with one of its Mulliner team members to see firsthand what a truly bespoke customization experience is like.
Going to Crewe, where Bentley is headquartered in the U.K., wasn’t an option, so it came to us. And it came packing cases full of exterior color swatches, interior veneer samples, and strips of leather upholstery in nearly every color you can think of. It felt a little bit like being unleashed in a candy shop, except at the end you get a car instead of a bag of jellybeans.
Tens of Billions of Combinations
On its website, Bentley boasts a baseline of 101 exterior colors, though you can expand this list to include any color from the luxury marque’s past, as well as opt for bespoke paint-matched hues. Interior leather choices offer 22 primary colors, 11 secondary shades, six accent colors, and various contrast stitching and piping options. There are eight wood veneer options with multiple finishes, which can also be paint-matched to any interior leather or exterior paint color. There are, according to Bentley, “10s of billions” of combinations—and this is all before Mulliner gets involved.
See, Mulliner is who you call when a so-called off-the-rack Bentley won’t cut it. This is the team that works with you if you want, oh, a personalized 278,566-stitch motif hand-crafted across the upper seat backs and door panels. (Yes, it’s actually happened before.) The sky’s the limit as long as the car passes the appropriate safety and materials tests.









