After 35 years at the brand and three years at the helm, Adrian Mardell is leaving at a pivotal time for the British company

- JLR CEO Adrian Mardell retires after 35 years with the company and nearly three at the helm.
- He led the British brands through a major financial turnaround and a bold shift toward EVs.
- His successor will face the hurdle of trade tariffs and Jaguar’s EV reinvention as a Bentley rival.
After nearly three decades of internal leadership and a pivotal run as CEO, Jaguar Land Rover is preparing for a leadership change that comes at a turning point for the company. Adrian Mardell is stepping down after nearly three years at the top and a total of 35 years with the brand. His departure signals the close of a significant chapter just as JLR moves into the next phase of its evolution.
Mardell took the reins in 2023 following the sudden exit of Thierry Bolloré. At that time, JLR was facing serious losses and post-pandemic supply constraints. Mardell turned things around with a dramatic financial rebound. High-margin models like the Defender and Range Rover proved strong in the market and continue to be desirable to this day. Last year, JLR posted its best profits in a decade and could hit a 10 percent margin target by next year.
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That financial success didn’t just come down to one or two models. Mardell introduced the structure that JLR currently uses, including what it calls the ‘House of Brands.’ Essentially, Defender, Discovery, Range Rover, and Jaguar all have their own distinct identity and marketing. Nevertheless, his boldest move, and perhaps the one that will mark his legacy more than any other, is that of Jaguar’s rebranding.
Jaguar’s Reinvention Takes Shape
Mardell green-lit the plan to take Jaguar from a luxury automaker aimed at rivaling brands like BMW to one that is going all-electric in hopes of courting buyers from Bentley and Rolls-Royce. The Type 00 concept gave us a clear indication of where Jaguar is headed from a design perspective. At the same time, it’ll be at least another year, if not more, before we see a new Jaguar production car roll off the line.

Despite leaving JLR in a far stronger position than when he found it, Mardell’s successor is going to have a huge challenge on their hands. The newly imposed US trade tariffs will almost certainly undermine margins, while electric Land Rover, Defender, and Discovery models are all getting pushed back, too.
Still, Mardell seems confident in the brand’s future. Speaking to Autocar, who broke the news of his retirement, he said: “In today’s market conditions, I don’t see anything which is going to concern me about the success of the new Jaguar in this new world at all, actually.”
On its part, the automaker told the publication that “Adrian Mardell has expressed his desire to retire from JLR after three years as CEO and 35 years with the company. His successor will be announced in due course.”
