06:41 07-05-2026

Mansory Emperor Signature for Rolls-Royce Cullinan Black Badge

mansory.com

Mansory reveals an Emperor Signature wide-body kit for the Rolls-Royce Cullinan Black Badge, tuned to 720 HP with a V12 and aggressive carbon-fiber styling.

German firm Mansory has unveiled a new Emperor Signature package for the Rolls-Royce Cullinan Black Badge. The project was revealed at Top Marques Monaco and is based on the updated Cullinan Series II Black Badge. It’s not a factory Rolls-Royce modification but a full tuning kit with aggressive styling and extra power.

Mansory,Rolls-Royce Cullinan Black Badge Emperor Signature
mansory.com

The visual overhaul is immediately obvious. The Cullinan gains a wide-body kit with carbon-fiber add-ons, a new hood, a reworked front bumper with large air intakes, side skirts, fender flares, a spoiler, and a revised rear bumper with a diffuser. It rides on fresh 24-inch forged wheels. Inside, Mansory has applied dark leather with orange accents, gloss surfaces, visible carbon, and signature logos.

There’s also a meaningful bump in performance. The Black Badge’s V12 has been tuned to deliver 720 hp and 1,050 Nm of torque, compared to the factory Black Badge’s roughly 600 hp and 900 Nm. According to the publication, the sprint to 100 km/h takes 4.8 seconds, while top speed remains electronically limited at 250 km/h. The gain comes from a PowerBox module and a sports exhaust system. Similar figures for the Emperor project have previously been quoted by other specialist outlets.

Mansory hasn’t disclosed pricing for this specific kit. Other wide-body Cullinan Series II Black Badge conversions with 24-inch wheels have appeared on the market for more than €1 million, but that doesn’t confirm the Emperor Signature’s price—the final cost will depend on the base vehicle, chosen options, and the individual commission. What’s clear is that Mansory has turned the Cullinan into one of its most attention-grabbing creations yet, a machine where tuning serves as much for its in-your-face looks as for the added grunt.

Caros Addington, Editor