
- This 2025 Cullinan Series II features Orange Metallic paint with blue brake calipers.
- Inside, it mixes bright blue and orange leather across nearly every surface.
- Custom cabin choices likely inflated the price by over $200K over a standard Cullinan.
For the most part, Rolls-Royce customers have excellent taste, configuring their vehicles with subtle shades or distinctive, colorful accents. But some owners clearly prefer a louder approach.
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Whoever commissioned this particular 2025 Cullinan seems to have spent a little too long studying some of Mansory’s recent projects, resulting in one of the most overwhelming Rolls-Royces we’ve seen in quite some time. As we all know, money doesn’t necessarily buy taste.
Read: For $610K, You’d Expect This Rolls To Come With A Chauffeur And A Side Hustle
There’s little wrong with the exterior of this Cullinan. In fact, we kind of like it. The bright Orange Metallic paint scheme is quite unusual for a Rolls-Royce, but it gives this example a unique appeal and will certainly make it stand out on the road. Less successful, however, are the details: silver and black wheels clash with the aesthetic, and bright blue brake calipers feel entirely out of place.
A Cabin That Doesn’t Hold Back
It’s in the interior where this Cullinan really sets itself apart from most others – for better or worse. We’ve seen Mansory build a slew of models with brightly-colored, two-tone leather cabins, and that’s exactly what this Rolls has. The seats are primarily clad in a bright shade of blue, contrasted with bright orange bases, orange stitching, orange piping, and even orange seatbelt buckles.
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The bold palette continues across the door panels, where blue dominates the surfaces, and spills into the front and rear center consoles. Blue leather also wraps the lower dashboard, while the top section combines black and orange in alternating panels. Even the steering wheel joins the theme, mixing orange and black leather to complete the look.
As if the combination of orange and blue leather wasn’t enough, the orange used in the cabin isn’t even the same shade of orange as the exterior, creating a particularly jarring effect.
A High Price for a Polarizing Build
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This Rolls-Royce Cullinan is currently listed for sale through Rolls-Royce Motor Cars Washington, carrying a sticker price of $638,600. That’s a serious amount of coin, particularly considering that prices for the new Cullinan Series II start at just a touch over $400,000 in the US.
Clearly, extensive customization accounts for the difference, but whether those additions enhance or detract from the final product is likely to spark debate. One thing is certain: no one will accuse it of being forgettable.
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