Volkswagen‘s new Project Trinity will arrive in 2026 as a cutting-edge EV, offering autonomous driving and introducing a ‘radical’ new business model, with most functions offered as downloadable services.
The forthcoming flagship model has been described previously as a “highly efficient flat-seat concept with an iconic design,” and a teaser image shown as part of a Volkswagen presentation suggests that it will take the form of a swooping saloon similar to the Arteon.
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The machine will be built on Wolfsburg’s advanced new Project Trinity EV architecture , which will use elements from the MEB EV platform but with new powertrains and advanced software. That will enable it to offer substantially more advanced systems, both in terms of driving technology and connectivity.
Project Trinity will launch in 2026, offering Level 2+ advanced driver assistance systems, and Volkswagen CEO Ralf Brandstätter said that would likely be upgraded to Level 4 – allowing for full autonomous driving on certain roads – by 2030.
Brandstätter described Project Trinity as “our software dream car”, saying it would introduce an entirely new business model for the firm, with a radically reduced number of variants. Buyers will be able to choose from only battery size, paint colour and wheel specification.
Owners will then be able to turn activate and deactivate certain hardware functions when required, with other features offered as over-the-air software downloads.
“We’re going to radically reduce the number of variants,” said Brandstätter. “With Trinity, the hardware is largely unified: you select battery capacity, colour and wheels and then order it on smartphone. The functions can be set as you go along: you can add features through your digital system.”
Brandstätter said that offering such functions as upgrades means that “Trinity is going to become a time machine”. The autonomous systems will benefit from the new ‘neural network’ that Volkswagen is aiming to develop from its connected cars all sharing real-time data on roads, traffic and other systems.
While no details of initial pricing have been set, Brandstätter said that Project Trinity is designed to “launch new technology in large volumes for the mainstream market”. He added: “With Trinity, Volkswagen is once again bringing the future to series-production cars.”
The production version of Project Trinity will be produced at Volkswagen’s Wolfsburg base, with the German firm saying that it will also “reinvent production as we know it today”. It says that the reduction in hardware variants will dramatically increase production times by reducing complexity and that it will introduce new production technology.