Alfa Romeo is no stranger to drama, both in design and in strategy. After pulling its high-performance Quadrifoglio models from the U.S. market last year, the Italian marque is flipping the script again. According to British executive Jules Tilstone, Alfa will restart production of the Giulia and Stelvio Quadrifoglio in April 2026, extending the life of its most celebrated combustion cars.
It’s a twist few expected. The Quadrifoglio duo was originally slated for retirement alongside the rest of Alfa’s internal combustion lineup, as the company pushed toward an all-electric future. But now, the growl of that twin-turbo V6 isn’t going quietly into the night.
The Quadrifoglio Legacy Lives On
When Alfa Romeo first introduced the Giulia Quadrifoglio in 2016, it wasn’t just another sports sedan. It was a statement, a 505-horsepower love letter to driving passion. The Stelvio Quadrifoglio followed soon after, offering SUV practicality without dulling Alfa’s sharp edges. Together, they became the emotional core of the brand, even if sales volume was modest.
The decision to discontinue the Quadrifoglio line in 2023 marked a painful pause for enthusiasts, especially in the U.S., where Alfa had finally started earning respect among performance purists. Their return, then, isn’t just a marketing move. It’s a cultural correction, a nod to the loyalists who saw Alfa not as a car company, but as a feeling.
A Shift Away From All-Electric Ambitions
This revival fits within Alfa Romeo’s broader pivot away from a strict EV roadmap. Earlier this year, leadership confirmed that the brand would continue developing internal combustion versions of the Giulia and Stelvio, defying industry trends that seemed to lock everyone into electrification.
It’s not a complete rejection of EVs. Alfa still has electric models in the pipeline, but the company now admits that its soul may need a little more gasoline before fully going silent. This balanced approach could buy time for Alfa to refine its identity in a rapidly changing market.
Will the U.S. Get Another Shot?
The big question is whether these reborn Quadrifoglios will return to American roads. While Alfa continues to sell the base Giulia and Stelvio here, the high-powered variants were pulled from U.S. showrooms a full year before production officially ended. Tilstone’s comments only confirmed a U.K. comeback, but there’s hope that global demand and a little pressure from fans might convince Alfa to extend the revival across the Atlantic.
Given the U.S. market’s enduring appetite for performance SUVs and sports sedans, keeping these models overseas would be a missed opportunity.
What Comes Next for Alfa
The return of the Quadrifoglio nameplate signals more than nostalgia. It could set the stage for future performance variants of Alfa’s next-generation internal combustion cars, proving that the brand’s racing spirit still has miles to go before it sleeps.
For now, one thing’s clear: the cloverleaf lives. And for enthusiasts who crave the sound, the feel, and the chaos only an Alfa can deliver, 2026 can’t come soon enough.




