X

The W12 S is the 200-mph flagship of Bentley's Flying Spur lineup

With 626 horsepower and an interior fit for royalty, the Flying Spur W12 S is a solid reminder that the best is never good enough for the well heeled among us.

andrewkrok.jpg
andrewkrok.jpg
Andrew Krok
Bentley Flying Spur W12 S
1 of 7 Bentley

The Flying Spur W12 S will be the new flagship for the Flying Spur lineup, which rests between the Continental GT coupe and the range-topping Mulsanne.

Bentley Flying Spur W12 S
2 of 7 Bentley

Power output is pegged at 626 horsepower and 605 pound-feet of torque, bumps of 10 hp and 15 lb-ft over the standard W12 model, respectively.

Bentley Flying Spur W12 S
3 of 7 Bentley

It's also the first four-door Bentley to break a 200-mph top speed (it's 202).

Bentley Flying Spur W12 S
4 of 7 Bentley

The car is outfitted with all manner of black exterior accents to give it a more menacing look.

Bentley Flying Spur W12 S
5 of 7 Bentley

The interior is equally dark and mysterious, but handing Bentley a pile of money will get you an interior in whatever color you like.

Bentley Flying Spur W12 S
6 of 7 Bentley

There's no official price, but it's fair to say that it's probably a tad more expensive than the standard W12, which starts at about $225,000.

Bentley Flying Spur W12 S
7 of 7 Bentley

Deliveries begin later this year.

More Galleries

Go Inside the Apple iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Pro: See How the New iPhones Look and Work
iphone 15 in different color from an angled view

Go Inside the Apple iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Pro: See How the New iPhones Look and Work

21 Photos
17 Hidden iOS 17 Features and Settings on Your iPhone
Invitation for the Apple September iPhone 15 event

17 Hidden iOS 17 Features and Settings on Your iPhone

18 Photos
Astronomy Photographer of the Year Winners Reveal Our Stunning Universe
andromeda

Astronomy Photographer of the Year Winners Reveal Our Stunning Universe

16 Photos
Check Out the iPhone 15's New Camera in Action
A photo of a silhouette of buildings on the water taken on the iPhone 15

Check Out the iPhone 15's New Camera in Action

12 Photos
I Got an Early Look at Intel's Glass Packaging Tech for Faster Chips
Rahul Manepalli, right, Intel's module engineering leader, shows a glass substrate panel before it's sliced into the small rectangles that will be bonded to the undersides of hundreds of test processors. The technology, shown here at Intel's CH8 facility in Chandler, Arizona, stands to improve performance and power consumption of advanced processors arriving later this decade. Glass substrates should permit physically larger processors comprised of several small "chiplets" for AI and data center work, but Intel expects they'll trickle down to PCs, too.

I Got an Early Look at Intel's Glass Packaging Tech for Faster Chips

20 Photos
Yamaha motorcycle and instrument designers trade jobs (pictures)
yamaha01.jpg

Yamaha motorcycle and instrument designers trade jobs (pictures)

16 Photos
CNET's 'Day of the Dead Devices' altar (pictures)
dia-de-los-muertos-3318-001.jpg

CNET's 'Day of the Dead Devices' altar (pictures)

9 Photos