Mercedes-Benz has previewed the updated interior of the upcoming Mercedes-AMG GT 4-Door ahead of its full reveal and the direction seems fairly clear. There are more screens than before and fewer physical buttons.
The four-door AMG GT has always aimed to balance performance with everyday usability and the new interior keeps the same driver-focused layout. The main infotainment display now sits angled toward the driver, reinforcing that cockpit-style layout AMG likes to emphasise. There is also a new passenger display integrated into the dashboard, giving the co-driver access to infotainment functions as well as a dedicated charging cradle for devices. Beneath the main screen sit two wireless charging pads separated by a divider so phones stay in place during enthusiastic driving.
Climate controls move to the screen.
The biggest change is the disappearance of the physical climate control buttons that once sat beneath the infotainment display. Temperature controls now appear as digital sliders integrated into the MBUX interface. Mercedes says the system combines touchscreen, haptic feedback, voice commands and physical inputs into what it calls a balanced operating concept. Whether drivers prefer this approach will likely depend on how often they adjust the temperature while driving.
Some physical controls remain.
Not everything has moved to the screen. The centre console now gets new rotary controls for adjusting driving modes and performance settings. Several shortcut buttons also remain, positioned between the wireless charging pad and the cupholder section. The idea appears to be a mix of digital and tactile inputs rather than a fully touchscreen-driven setup.
Rear layout remains unchanged.
Despite its four-door layout, the AMG GT retains its coupe-like proportions, with a sloping roofline that prioritises style over rear-seat space. Individual rear seats continue as standard rather than a full bench, underlining the car’s performance-focused character. Mercedes has yet to reveal the full technical details of the updated model, but the interior preview suggests the next AMG GT 4 Door will lean further into digital interfaces while keeping the driver at the centre of the experience.