Boxster The Porsche Boxster is a mid-engine two-seater roadster. It was Porsche's first road vehicle to be originally designed as a roadster since the
914. The first-generation Boxster Type
986 was introduced in late 1996; it was powered by a 2.5-litre
flat six-cylinder engine. The design was heavily influenced by the 1993 Boxster Concept. In 2000, the base model was upgraded to a 2.7-litre engine and a new Boxster S variant was introduced with a 3.2-litre engine. In 2003, styling and engine output were upgraded on both variants. Production of the Type 986 began at the former
928 facility in
Stuttgart, Germany, in 1996.
Valmet Automotive also manufactured Boxsters under contract to Porsche at a facility in
Uusikaupunki,
Finland. The Boxster was Porsche's biggest volume seller from its introduction in 1996 until the introduction of the
Cayenne sport utility vehicle in 2003. As of September 2012, additional production of the Boxster started at the former
Karmann-factory in
Osnabrück. In 2005, Porsche debuted the second generation of the Boxster Type
987, with a more powerful engine and styling inspired by the
Carrera GT. Engine output increased in 2007, when the Boxster models received the engines from their corresponding Cayman variants. In 2009, the Boxster models received several new cosmetic and mechanical upgrades, further increasing engine output and performance. The third-generation Boxster Type
981 was launched at the
2012 Geneva Motor Show.
Cayman First launched in 2005 for the 2006 model year, the Cayman is a
coupé derived from Porsche's second and third generation Boxster roadster, styled in its first iteration by
Pinky Lai. All Caymans up to 2012 were manufactured in Finland by Valmet Automotive. As Volkswagen assumed control of Porsche AG, production of Caymans and Boxsters after 2012 began in the former
Karmann plant in
Osnabrück, Germany, at the time owned by Volkswagen and also used for production of the 2012
Volkswagen Golf Mk6 convertible. The car and the
Cayman Islands are named after the
caiman, a member of the
alligator family. When the Cayman arrived at dealerships for sale, the automaker adopted four caimans at
Stuttgart's
Wilhelma Zoo. Porsche brought an infringement lawsuit in 2009 against
Crocs, the maker of the popular rubber shoes. At issue was the footwear company's clog name, also called Cayman. An injunction was granted against Crocs Europe, a division of the Longmont, Colorado-based shoe company preventing their use in Germany of the Cayman name.
718 The Porsche Boxster and Cayman Type
982 was introduced in 2016, for the 2017 model year, and renamed the
Porsche 718 Boxster and
Porsche 718 Cayman. Reviving the historic
718 moniker while switching engines from naturally aspirated flat sixes to small-displacement
flat-four turbocharged units. The new 718 Cayman was also repositioned with an entry price lower than that of the 718 Boxster, in keeping with Porsche's higher pricing for roadster models. In May 2025, Porsche North America confirmed the rumours that global “production for all current 718 Boxster and 718 Cayman variants, including RS models, is scheduled to end in October of" 2025. Porsche CEO
Oliver Blume has confirmed future production of full-electric replacements but said they will arrive in the "medium term." Production of the 718 Boxster and 718 Cayman variants ended in 2025. == First generation: 986 Boxster (1996–2004)==