Stuttgart, Germany—April 14, 2026, clock just past 15:05 CEST.
- Porsche’s German patent shows exterior stripes able to appear, disappear, or shift colors depending on the car’s drive mode.
- Porsche’s coating might also let drivers see the EV’s battery level from the exterior.
- Porsche is turning to higher-margin models and more customization following a sluggish opening to 2026.
Porsche has put in for a German patent covering bodywork tech that lets racing stripes show up, shift colors, or vanish altogether as the driver switches modes. The patent docs—recently spotlighted in automotive press—also reveal Porsche’s idea for using the exterior to display battery charge levels on its EVs.
Porsche is pushing upscale, banking on pricier sports models and more customization as sales cool. First-quarter deliveries dropped 15%, the company reported April 10. Back in March, CEO Michael Leiters called for Porsche to be “leaner, faster and even more desirable.” Porsche Newsroom
Porsche AG lodged patent application 10 2024 127 771.8 on Sept. 25, 2024, according to Germany’s patent register. It appeared publicly for the first time on March 26, 2026 and is still awaiting a decision. The inventors on record: Carla Römisch, Tobias Bongards and Richard Käfer.
The filing outlines what auto outlets have been referring to as electronic paper—a type of low-power display film—or describes it as a paramagnetic coating, which is a layer that alters appearance with applied voltage. Motor1 highlights one use case: stripes that switch to green for efficiency mode, red for sport, with additional color-shifting panels behind the rear wheels and along the rear diffuser.
Porsche floated another, more straightforward application too. According to recent reports, the company suggested using the coating as an exterior charge indicator—letting owners check battery status directly on the car’s body, instead of relying on a cabin display or phone app.
BMW has already taken similar tech to the concept stage. The iX Flow could flip between black and white, while the later i Vision Dee ramped things up, enabling as many as 32 colors using 240 E Ink segments, each controlled on its own. “Express different facets of their personality” on the car’s exterior, BMW project lead Stella Clarke explained. BMW Group PressClub
Porsche already leans heavily on its customization arm. “A cornerstone of our product strategy,” as Alexander Fabig, vice president for Individualisation and Classic, puts it. Roughly 98% of 911 buyers opt for at least one Exclusive Manufaktur feature, according to the company. Buyers can choose from more than 1,000 options spanning the lineup and over 190 different Paint to Sample colors. Porsche Newsroom
Still, this is only a filing for now. Carmakers frequently patent concepts that never reach the market, as Kelley Blue Book pointed out. Recent reports have highlighted clear obstacles: price, tricky manufacturing, keeping out the weather, plus the headache of fixing damage.
Porsche’s still working to boost margins, not volume. The automaker reported a 22% jump in 911 deliveries for the first quarter, despite a decline in total group volumes. Sales chief Matthias Becker pointed to robust demand for the 911 lineup—including GTS, Turbo, and GT models—as evidence the sports-car core is holding up.
At this point, those vanishing stripes are just sketches—don’t expect to find them in any online configurator yet. But Porsche’s patent hints at more than design tweaks: it’s a look at bodywork that merges aesthetics with real-time vehicle data, all on the same panel.