Wealthy millennials are spending thousands on Jaguar Land Rover monthly subscriptions as flexibility becomes the newest form of luxury
Jaguar Land Rover has discovered wealthy millennials will pay extra for flexibility. · Fortune · Courtesy of Jaguar Land Rover

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The world’s richest drivers are living in a golden age of customization. Collective investments by luxury carmakers ticking into the hundreds of millions have allowed their customers to design their vehicles as though they were tweaking them in the factory as they were being built.

After investing tens of millions of dollars on bespoke paint options, one of those carmakers, Jaguar Land Rover, is now eyeing the luxury of flexibility to get its hands on freshly minted wealthy millennials.

JLR’s luxury pivot

In the last few years, Jaguar Land Rover has been on a mission to nudge itself deeper into the high-net-worth and ultra-net-worth markets after realizing it couldn’t compete on volume with more mass-market premium brands like Mercedes-Benz and BMW.

There have been stutters along the way, not least the tumultuous Jaguar rebrand, which became a victim of online culture wars before a model was even unveiled. Nevertheless, it has underscored the group’s determination to target the next generation of wealthy car buyers.

That is reflected in the evolution of JLR’s volumes. Five years ago, the average JLR car sold for £42,000 ($53,000). That meant the carmaker had to shift 660,000 models in a year to break even. Since then, the average price of a JLR vehicle has increased to £70,000 ($88,000), with the break-even rate more than halving to 300,000 cars.

Emboldened by its strategic shift, JLR is investing in more avenues to appeal to its wealthy customers’ idiosyncrasies.

In January, JLR announced a £65 million ($81 million) investment across two of its sites to enhance its paint capabilities. In a hat tip to its targeted demographic, the group said this would let prospective customers paint their cars the same color as their private jet or yacht.

There are signs the pivot to luxury is already working. JLR swung to profit in 2024 after years of losses. JLR, though, is under no illusions about the need to sustain that pivot to continue to survive and thrive in an increasingly unforgiving auto market.

The company’s competitors in the luxury field have made their own investments in the lucrative personalization market. Rolls-Royce invested £300 million ($379 million) in its Goodwood manufacturing site to increase its offering of bespoke models. Ferrari, meanwhile, made about a fifth of its revenues last year from customization.

To continue finding new ways to appeal to the luxury market, JLR is outsourcing some of its innovation. That’s where InMotion Ventures Studio comes in. The group essentially operates as JLR’s startup incubator, developing companies that could one day form part of the carmaker’s official product offering.