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HomeNews and EventsFord Teases Electrified 2025 Mustang Shelby GT350 and Shelby-E

Ford Teases Electrified 2025 Mustang Shelby GT350 and Shelby-E

The only thing you can count on in life is change

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With the 2024 Ford Mustang ready to debut this summer, the only question enthusiasts have is, “What does Ford have up its sleeve?” Currently, Ford only has the EcoBoost, GT and Dark Horse planned, but we know there’s gotta be a Mach I or Boss 302 planned for the second model year. So, enthusiasts can rejoice because Ford has just teased us with a bit of what’s in store for 2025: the Mustang Shelby GT350 as well as a Shelby variant of the Mach-E EV called the Mustang Shelby-E.

In another era, Ford and other manufacturers used to introduce all Mustang models at once but, today, things are different — Ford introduces models in a staggered manner. It is painful to deal with as an enthusiast, but it helps extend the PR for Ford.

So, the big news is that the 2025 Mustang Shelby GT350 will be the first “real” Mustang to be electrified. The engine will be similar to the 5.0-liter V8 that will power the 2024 GT, but the engine will again be another breed thanks to the flat plane crankshaft that is making a return. The previous Mustang Shelby GT350 offered 526 horsepower, and we expect the new GT350 to offer another 75 or so horses. In addition, a front-mounted electric motor will power both front wheels and will add approximately 100 horsepower. Altogether, the hybrid setup will make 700 horses. Not bad for a secretary’s car! Unfortunately for the “save the manuals” gang, the only transmission will be a seven-speed dual-clutch automatic that’s similar to the one used on the outgoing Mustang Shelby GT500. No word on the size of the battery or the added weight of upcoming vehicle.

The current 2024 roster. (Image courtesy of Ford Motor Company)

Also new will be the very first 2025 Mustang Shelby-E. We have absolutely no information on this vehicle other than this new Shelby variant will have four electric motors. We anticipate that, to the collective groan of SUV haters everywhere, performance may be better than that of the 2025 Mustang Shelby GT350.

Yes, it may be a bitter pill to swallow for some, but a hybrid GT350 and a Shelby variant of an EV SUV is how Ford is bringing us greater and more flexible performance than we ever imagined. As purists, we at the ClassicCars.com Journal have a “wait and see” attitude, so let’s reserve judgment as more information trickles in throughout the year.

But it’s certainly a good time to be an enthusiast into horsepower. #aprilfools

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Diego Rosenberg
Diego Rosenberg
Lead Writer Diego Rosenberg is a native of Wilmington, Delaware and Princeton, New Jersey, giving him plenty of exposure to the charms of Carlisle and Englishtown. Though his first love is Citroen, he fell for muscle cars after being seduced by 1950s finned flyers—in fact, he’s written two books on American muscle. But please don’t think there is a strong American bias because foreign weirdness is never far from his heart. With a penchant for underground music from the 1960-70s, Diego and his family reside in the Southwest.

9 COMMENTS

  1. EVs are a good idea. They aren’t ready for the market. Close, but for what they sell for, not taking into account what will happen to an affordable mustang to what an EV version is bound to cost!!! Safety and battery technology needs great improvement. Besides with Ford in contract to source batteries from China?!? I’m out.

    • In reality, if we want to pursue electic options, we will be working with China–they own the mines that produce what we need. While I agree that tech needs to be improved, if we do not support these endeavours by purchasing models as they come, there will be no data to feed to the engineers who will be updating and improving these systems. However, I don’t see anything published on 1 APR as legit anyway, lol.

  2. Oh, Diego, I think you missed Ron’s point. The conversation was about Mustangs. And I’m certain that from the beginning, Ford sourced some small content from China- but never the power. In an E-car, the battery is the power, the motor(s) are just the transmission apparatus. I drove a Chinese made Buick when overseas a couple of years ago, and it was a good, solid, high value auto. But it was an ICE car, and a Buick. I suspect that the Buick fan base, outside of the stereotypical geriatrics, are both far less vocal and numerous than Mustang folks (I’m a GTO guy, sympathize with the Mustang folks, wouldn’t own one). The ‘Stang crowd doesn’t want to have our political differences with China interfere with the design, maintenance, or image of their icons. Oh- almost all the content in my phone and computers is South Korean, folks I trust far more than the Chinese. And their stuff is great.

  3. #aprilfools says it all…. I heard that each wheel has a motor and battery along with the patented inductive charge hamster cage with extended feeder feature…

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