You probably won’t believe this — but there’s an affordable Jaguar that makes far more sense to buy today than a brand-new Porsche 992 911.

It’s not newer.
It’s not faster on paper.
But financially and emotionally, it may be the smarter enthusiast buy.

The car is the Jaguar XKR.

Why the Jaguar XKR Is Special

The Jaguar XKR represents an era of Jaguar that no longer exists.

Under the bonnet sits a 5.0-litre supercharged V8, producing 510 horsepower, sent exclusively to the rear wheels. No hybrid systems. No filters. Just raw, mechanical character.

Key Jaguar XKR highlights:

  • 5.0L supercharged V8

  • 510 horsepower

  • Rear-wheel drive

  • Grand tourer proportions with genuine performance

This is the kind of car manufacturers simply cannot build anymore.

Jaguar XKR Prices Are Quietly Rising

For years, the XKR was ignored — which is exactly why it now makes sense.

  • Good examples: ~£20,000

  • Investment-grade examples: £35,000–£40,000

Values have been steadily creeping upwards, especially for well-specced, low-mileage cars.

That’s the opposite of what happens to a new 992 911, which immediately faces depreciation and long waiting lists.

End of an Era Jaguar

The XKR marks the end of:

  • Jaguar’s supercharged V8 era

  • Traditional British GT cars

  • Mechanical, analogue performance

As Jaguar’s modern brand direction continues to shift — and in many ways lose its identity — older Jaguars with real character become more desirable.

Brand dilution doesn’t hurt these cars.
It helps them.

Why the XKR Can Be a Better Buy Than a New 992 911

A new 992 911:

  • Ties up six figures

  • Depreciates early in ownership

  • Exists in huge numbers

A Jaguar XKR:

  • Can be bought for a fraction of the price

  • Offers a V8 that will never return

  • Is already near the bottom of its depreciation curve

  • Has growing enthusiast interest

From a value perspective, the choice is clearer than it sounds.

The Investment Case for the Jaguar XKR

Cars that perform best long-term usually share these traits:

  • End-of-era engines

  • Underappreciated at launch

  • Strong emotional appeal

  • Limited future replacements

The Jaguar XKR checks every box.

It’s not about beating a 911 on lap times — it’s about owning something special, finite, and increasingly appreciated.

Want to Buy Cars That Don’t Depreciate?

I’ve helped 5,000+ car enthusiasts move away from depreciating purchases and into good cars that don’t lose money.

I’ve spent a ridiculous amount of time creating a non-generic list of the 100 best investment cars to buy in 2026, focusing on:

  • Under-appreciated models

  • Last-of-their-kind drivetrains

  • Where buyer demand is growing

  • Cars still early in their value cycle

👉 Click here to access the list

Sometimes the smartest buy isn’t the obvious one.

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