The new GranTurismo's interior has been kept a secret… until now.
The new Maserati GranTurismo was released to the world in October of 2022, but Maserati hasn't shown photos of the interior until now. Despite the importance of its exquisite-looking four-seater sports car, the Italian automaker hasn't made a song and dance about the interior, and instead low-key showed it off via social media.
The interiors show the black Modena, two-tone Trofeo, and the cream Folgore trim. To our eyes, the new interiors look spectacular and pure Maserati. Or, as someone on Instagram puts it, not overtly using parts from the Stellantis parts bins.
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We notice there's a lot of detail and small artful touches in the Maserati GranTurismo, like a small Italian flag badge by the passenger dash vent, textured and stitched inserts throughout, wood and/or metal accents, and the Maserati badge with “Since 1914” stamped into the outside ends of the dashboard. Hopefully, the blue inserts on the Trofeo trim seats are silk, as on models before, and that's a feature that sets Maserati apart from its equally expensive competitors.
The seats themselves look more comfortable than sporty, which fits with the grand touring aspirations of the name. The rear seats look like they might be a little cramped, which is not unusual for 2+2 grand tourers.
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The dashboard looks familiar to those that have seen photos of the also-new Maserati Grecale. There's no reason to think they don't share the 12.3-inch digital instrument cluster, a 12.3-inch touchscreen for the infotainment, and an 8.8-inch touchscreen in the center console. Also, just to remind you it's a luxury vehicle, the digital clock has an analog face.
Maserati claims to have the “simplest and fastest digital climate control on the market,” but we still can't help but roll our eyes at automakers for refusing to learn the lesson that not using physical controls for the climate system is a bad idea for usability. We notice that the control for drive modes is a rotary dial, so somebody somewhere must have told the designer that putting those in a touchscreen menu is a bridge too far.
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Keyword: Maserati Sneakily Reveals The GranTurismo's Biggest Secret