- Maybach SL 680 debuts in NZ, pairing a 430kW turbo V8 with a comfort-tuned chassis.
- Exclusive aesthetics include a PixelPaint bonnet and a hand-finished, Nappa leather interior.
- Priced from $432,400, SL 680 focuses on bespoke luxury and high-end personalisation.
Mercedes has taken the SL roadster, already a thoroughly competent two-seater, and handed it to Maybach's craftspeople.
The SL 680 is now available in New Zealand, and it's what happens when performance and bespoke indulgence collide at 430kW.

Under the bonnet sits a 4.0-litre V8 biturbo pumping out 430kW and 800Nm of torque. Via 4Matic+ all-wheel drive, that translates to 0 to 100km/h in 4.1 seconds, which is genuinely quick for something that weighs more than a standard SL and rides on a chassis tuned for composure rather than carving apexes.
The nine-speed transmission includes a dedicated Maybach drive programme, and there's rear-axle steering with up to 2.5 degrees of lock for agility that shouldn't exist in a car this serene.
What separates this from a regular SL, though, isn't the physics. It's the obsession.
Design that whispers (loudly)

The exterior signals Maybach presence through a bespoke grille, an Obsidian Black bonnet, and 21-inch forged alloys.
But the real flex is the PixelPaint bonnet option, a process that precisely applies intricate Maybach patterns directly to the bodywork, then gets hand-sanded through multiple clearcoat layers for an almost jewellery-like depth.

At $16,900 for the privilege, it's not cheap. Neither is the $24,300 option for Maybach Exclusive paint, which unlocks access to over fifty high-end finishes.
Inside, Nappa leather meets a Dinamica microfibre roof liner, with seats featuring embossed Maybach emblems and a floral upholstery layout that feels deliberate rather than decorative.

A Burmester 3D surround system with 17 speakers and 1220 watts keeps occupants entertained, while the 11.9-inch MBUX display handles navigation, 5G connectivity and augmented reality waypoints.
The price of exclusivity

Entry sits at $432,400 drive-away, which is substantial but not unreasonable for a Maybach-badged roadster with this much engineering underneath. The options list tells the story: you're not just buying a car but customising an experience.
Whether the Maybach treatment justifies the premium over a standard SL remains subjective. What's undeniable is the intent: Mercedes is arguing that open-air luxury and meticulous personalisation can coexist with genuine performance. For buyers who value craft as much as acceleration, that's a compelling argument.