Dodge will reveal its first all-electric muscle car early next year, and that will mark the beginning of the end for the brand’s focus on big displacement V8s. The iconic Hellcat engine is set to go out of production by 2024, according to the Dodge chief executive.
Internal combustion engines won’t vanish entirely from the brand’s lineup, but the automaker will shift to hybrid technology and eventually go all-electric, in line with sibling brands owned by global mega-manufacturer Stellantis.
The shift shouldn’t come as a surprise. Under President Joe Biden, the U.S. is on a path to have 40-50% of all new vehicles go electric by 2030. Even before then, it would become increasingly difficult to meet new emissions and fuel economy regulations with conventional powertrains like the Hellcat engine.
In Good Company
And Dodge is by no means alone, as even ultraexotic performance brands like Aston Martin, Ferrari, and Lamborghini have outlined plans to shift to hybrids and all-electric models in the coming decade.

Rumors of an all-electric Dodge muscle car began circulating early this year, the brand confirming that plan in July and adding more details when it announced its “Never Lift” strategy earlier this month.
But Dodge CEO Tim Kuniskis now says the electric muscle car is just part of a broader change of direction. Shortly after revealing that battery-electric vehicle, the brand will introduce its first-ever plug-in hybrid, Kuniskis told Motor Trend, with a third “significant” vehicle to follow.
Holding Back on Details

No Durango Plug-In

Mean and Green
