Lamborghini Temerario: Specs, Price & What Miami Buyers Need to Know in 2026

GridLocal Miami CarsGridLocal Miami Cars
Wednesday, April 15, 202612 min read min read

The Lamborghini Temerario replaces the Huracán with a twin-turbo V8 hybrid making 907 hp. Here's everything about specs, pricing, delivery timelines, and what it means for Miami's supercar scene.

The Lamborghini Temerario is the most important car Lamborghini has made in a decade. It replaces the Huracán — Lamborghini's best-selling model ever — with something radically different under the skin: a twin-turbocharged 4.0-liter V8 paired with three electric motors, producing a combined 907 hp. For a brand built on naturally aspirated V10s and V12s, the Temerario represents a seismic shift. And for Miami, a city where Lamborghinis are as common as palm trees, it's about to become the new default supercar on every major boulevard.

The name means "reckless" or "fearless" in Italian — fitting for a car that bets Lamborghini's future on turbos, hybrids, and a smaller displacement engine. Whether you're on the waitlist or just curious, here's everything Miami buyers need to know about the Lamborghini Temerario in 2026.

Lamborghini Temerario Specs: What's Under the Hood

The headline numbers are staggering, but the engineering details tell the real story:

SpecificationLamborghini Temerario
Engine4.0L Twin-Turbo V8 (flat-plane crank)
Electric Motors3 (1 rear axle-mounted, 2 front axle)
Combined Output907 hp (677 hp ICE + 230 hp electric)
Engine Redline10,000 RPM
Transmission8-speed dual-clutch (DCT)
DrivetrainAWD (electric front axle + mechanical rear)
0-60 MPH~2.7 seconds
0-124 MPH (0-200 km/h)Under 9 seconds
Top Speed211+ MPH
Curb Weight~3,400 lbs (estimated)
EV Range~30 miles (electric-only mode)
BatteryLithium-ion, supercapacitor-assisted
BodyCarbon fiber / aluminum hybrid chassis

The V8 alone revs to 10,000 RPM — a number that belongs in a Formula 1 car, not a road car. The flat-plane crankshaft gives it a completely different character than the cross-plane V8s in AMGs or Ferraris. Lamborghini says the sound profile is distinctly its own: higher-pitched, more frenetic, and designed to remind you that turbocharging doesn't have to mean boring.

Lamborghini Temerario Price: What Miami Dealers Are Quoting

Lamborghini has set the base MSRP for the Temerario at approximately $300,000–$320,000. But if you're shopping in Miami, base price is a starting point for negotiation — in the wrong direction.

ConfigurationEstimated Price
Temerario (Base MSRP)$300,000–$320,000
With Ad Personam options$350,000–$400,000
Dealer markup (first allocations)$50,000–$150,000+
Realistic Miami out-the-door (2026)$380,000–$500,000+

First-year Temerario allocations are going to existing Lamborghini customers — the people who bought Huracáns, Urus models, and Revueltos. If you're a new buyer walking into a Miami dealer without purchase history, expect to wait or pay a significant markup. This is standard Lamborghini practice, and Miami's demand makes it worse.

Temerario vs. Huracán: What's Actually Different

The Temerario isn't just a Huracán with a new engine. It's a fundamentally different car:

FeatureHuracán (Outgoing)Temerario (New)
Engine5.2L NA V104.0L Twin-Turbo V8 + 3 electric motors
Power602–640 hp907 hp
Torque DeliveryLinear, builds with RPMInstant (electric fill at low RPM)
0-60 MPH2.9–3.1 sec~2.7 sec
SoundIconic V10 wailHigh-revving V8 + electric whine
EV ModeNoYes (~30 miles)
Front AxleMechanical AWDElectric torque vectoring
Transmission7-speed DCT8-speed DCT

The biggest loss? That naturally aspirated V10 sound. The Huracán's engine was one of the last great automotive symphonies — no turbos, no electric assistance, just 8,500 RPM of pure mechanical fury. The Temerario will be faster in every measurable way, but it won't sound like that. Expect Huracán values to firm up as enthusiasts who want the V10 experience rush to buy the last ones.

Lamborghini Temerario Delivery Timeline for Miami

Lamborghini began taking orders in late 2024, with the first deliveries expected in mid-to-late 2025. By April 2026, the delivery situation in Miami looks like this:

  • First allocations (Q3–Q4 2025): Delivered to VIP clients and existing multi-car Lamborghini customers
  • Second wave (Q1–Q2 2026): Broader availability, but still allocation-based at most dealers
  • Open ordering (estimated late 2026): When supply begins to meet demand and markups normalize

Miami's two authorized Lamborghini dealerships — Lamborghini Miami (North Miami Beach) and Prestige Imports (also the longtime Lamborghini dealer for South Florida) — both have waitlists. If you haven't placed a deposit yet, you're looking at a 2026 or early 2027 delivery at best.

How the Temerario Fits Into Miami's Supercar Scene

Miami is one of the top three Lamborghini markets in the United States, alongside Los Angeles and New York. The Huracán was ubiquitous here — you'd see multiple on a single drive down Collins Avenue. The Temerario is going to occupy that same space, but with a few twists:

  • EV mode for Miami Beach: The 30-mile electric range means you can cruise Ocean Drive, South Beach, and the Design District silently. Late-night arrivals at restaurants and hotels without waking the neighborhood — a genuine lifestyle benefit in Miami's residential-adjacent nightlife zones.
  • Better in traffic: The electric torque fill means the Temerario won't lug or stumble at low speeds the way the Huracán sometimes could. Stop-and-go on I-95 will be more refined.
  • The rental fleet factor: Miami's exotic car rental companies will add Temerarios as soon as they can get allocations. Expect to see them on Turo and at rental agencies by late 2026 or 2027, which will make them even more visible on the streets.

Should You Wait for the Temerario or Buy a Huracán Now?

This is the question every Miami Lamborghini buyer is asking in 2026. The answer depends on what you value:

Buy a Huracán now if:

  • You want the naturally aspirated V10 — there won't be another one
  • You prefer a simpler, lighter car without hybrid complexity
  • You're buying as a collector — the STO, Tecnica, and Sterrato will appreciate
  • You want to avoid markups — used Huracáns are priced fairly right now

Wait for the Temerario if:

  • You want the latest technology and maximum performance
  • EV mode and better fuel economy matter to you
  • You plan to daily drive it — the hybrid system makes city driving easier
  • You're building a relationship with a dealer for future allocations (Lamborghini rewards loyalty)

Lamborghini Temerario Competitors in Miami

The Temerario enters a market that's more competitive than anything the Huracán faced:

CompetitorPowerBase PriceKey Advantage
Ferrari 296 GTB819 hp (V6 hybrid)$345,000Lighter, sharper handling
McLaren 750S740 hp (V8 twin-turbo)$310,000Lightest, most focused driver's car
Porsche 911 GT3 RS518 hp (NA flat-6)$230,000Track weapon, analog feel
Mercedes-AMG GT Black Series720 hp (V8 twin-turbo)$400,000+ (used)Aero monster, collector status
Aston Martin Valhalla998 hp (V8 hybrid)$800,000+Hypercar territory

The Temerario's 907 hp output puts it above all of these except the Valhalla — at a fraction of the price. Whether that translates to a better driving experience remains to be seen, but on paper, the value proposition is extraordinary.

What the Temerario Means for Lamborghini's Future

The Temerario is Lamborghini's proof that electrification doesn't have to kill the supercar. The 10,000 RPM redline, the aggressive styling, the absurd power figure — these are all designed to reassure enthusiasts that Lamborghini hasn't gone soft. And the EV mode, the improved efficiency, the electric torque vectoring — these are concessions to a world that increasingly demands them.

For Miami, the Lamborghini Temerario will quickly become as defining as the Huracán was before it. It's faster, more technologically advanced, and better suited to the city's unique combination of show-off culture and actual driving. If you can get an allocation at MSRP, it's one of the best supercar buys of 2026. If you're paying a markup, just make sure it's a markup you can stomach — because prices will normalize within 12-18 months of full production.

Source: GridLocal Miami Cars
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