Jaguar Land Rover plans to cut costs by £1.7 billion over the next two years and lower its cash breakeven volumes towards 300,000 units as the luxury automaker seeks to strengthen profitability and reduce its exposure to swings in global demand.
The targets were unveiled at the company's Investor Day on Wednesday, where management outlined a series of initiatives aimed at improving efficiency across manufacturing, product development, purchasing, and operations.
The programme, referred to internally as Enterprise Missions, represents one of the clearest financial targets announced by JLR since the launch of its Reimagine transformation strategy.
The move comes after several years of recovery that saw the company restore profitability through tighter supply management, stronger pricing, and a greater focus on high-value vehicles.
JLR said reducing breakeven volumes would improve resilience across economic cycles and allow the business to remain profitable at lower sales levels.
The company has increasingly shifted away from pursuing market share and volume growth, instead prioritising revenue and profit per vehicle.
That strategy has already delivered results. Average revenue per vehicle has risen from £47,700 in FY19 to £74,400 in FY26, reflecting a richer product mix led by Range Rover and Defender.
Chief Executive PB Balaji told investors the focus would now be on creating a more resilient operating model capable of generating sustainable returns even in a volatile global environment.
The cost-reduction drive comes at a time when premium carmakers face growing uncertainty from slowing EV adoption in some markets, rising competition from Chinese manufacturers, and continued geopolitical and supply chain disruptions.
JLR said its efforts would be supported by improvements in process efficiency, warranty performance, launch execution, and manufacturing excellence.
The company also highlighted cybersecurity, supply chain resilience, and business continuity as key priorities as it works to strengthen operational stability.
For investors, the announcement signals a shift in emphasis from recovery to structural profitability, with management increasingly focused on cash generation and lowering the risks associated with a cyclical luxury automotive business.