Porsche has been personalizing cars through its Sonderwunsch program since the ’50s, but the latest creation from its Miami-based Latin America division takes that heritage somewhere entirely new. Celebrating 25 years of Porsche Latin America, the one-off 911 GT3 Touring “Ocelot” launches a fresh series called Icons of Latin America — each build drawing from the continent’s biodiversity, culture, and landscapes. Named after the elusive wild cat prowling Colombia’s Amazon rainforest, this GT3 Touring trades the usual track-ready aggression for something more refined, more storytelling.

A Color That Shifts With the Light
The Ocelot’s exterior wears an exclusive Paint-to-Sample finish called Forest Green Metallic, a hue that mimics the rainforest canopy by revealing different shades depending on how sunlight hits the panels. Accenting that verdant base are Centenaire Silver details — a nod to chrome-trimmed 911s from the ’60s — applied to the rear light pagoda, door handles, mirror housings, and rear spoiler’s gurney flap. Even the 20/21-inch forged aluminum wheels get the two-tone treatment, balancing modern performance hardware with vintage touches.

Welcome to the Jungle
Pop the doors and you’re met with Cohiba Brown leather throughout the cabin, a color choice meant to echo the ocelot’s golden-brown coat. Crema and Truffle Brown cross-stitching adds texture across the surfaces, while the sport seats feature black-and-white Pepita houndstooth fabric centers — a vintage Porsche touch that feels right at home here. But the real standout are the embossed ocelot silhouettes on each headrest, lifted directly from Colombian wildlife crossing signs.
The steering wheel gets its own Cohiba Brown leather wrap with a Truffle Brown marker at 12 o’clock, and even the floor mats and seatbelts share matching tones. Open the doors and illuminated sill guards display different scripts on each side: “30 Años de Autoelite” (honoring Porsche’s Colombian importer) on the driver’s side, “25 Años de Porsche Latin America” on the passenger side. The B-pillars wear badges marking the car’s place in the Icons of Latin America collection.

Pure GT3 Underneath
Mechanically, the Ocelot remains untouched, still with the naturally aspirated 4.0-liter flat-six producing 502hp that’s made the 992-generation GT3 a benchmark. That means the same motorsport-derived double-wishbone front suspension, the same swan-neck rear wing, the same commitment to analog driving that’s defined this nameplate since 1999. Sonderwunsch projects rarely mess with the engineering, and that’s probably for the best. The GT3 doesn’t need help in that department.

Spec Sheet
Model: 2025 Porsche 911 GT3 Touring “Ocelot”
Engine: 4.0L naturally aspirated flat-six
Power: 502 hp
Exterior Color: Forest Green Metallic (Paint-to-Sample) with Centenaire Silver accents
Interior: Cohiba Brown leather with Pepita houndstooth fabric, Crema and Truffle Brown stitching
Wheels: 20/21-inch forged aluminum, dual-tone finish
Special Features: Embossed ocelot headrests, illuminated anniversary sill guards, Icons of Latin America badging
Edition: One-off Sonderwunsch build
Pricing & Availability
As a one-off Sonderwunsch commission from Porsche Latin America itself, the Ocelot won’t be available for purchase. It’s the first in what Porsche promises will be an ongoing Icons of Latin America series, with more regionally inspired builds coming down the pipeline. Pricing details weren’t disclosed, but Sonderwunsch projects typically run well into six figures depending on customization depth.
Recap
Porsche 911 GT3 Ocelot One-Off
Porsche Latin America kicked off its new Icons of Latin America series with the one-off 911 GT3 Touring “Ocelot,” a Sonderwunsch build that pays tribute to Colombia’s Amazon rainforest through a custom Forest Green Metallic paint job and Cohiba Brown leather interior complete with embossed ocelot silhouettes on the headrests.