Lamborghini Aventador SVJ: The Final, Greatest Aventador Explained

The Lamborghini Aventador SVJ is the final, most extreme iteration of a model that spent twelve years defining what a flagship Lamborghini should look like, sound like, and feel like. SVJ stands for Superveloce Jota – Super Velocity, combined with the J designation that Lamborghini has historically reserved for its most extreme models. It broke the production car Nürburgring Nordschleife lap record when it was released in 2018. It is, by any measure, the greatest Aventador ever made.

The Aventador Legacy

The Aventador launched in 2011 as the replacement for the Murciélago, and spent its production life evolving through multiple variants: the base LP700-4, the Roadster, the LP720-4 50th Anniversario, the SV, the S, and finally the SVJ. Each variant pushed the formula further – more power, more aerodynamic sophistication, more driver focus.

The SVJ arrived in 2018 as the definitive endpoint of this evolution. It uses the same 6.5-litre naturally aspirated V12 as previous Aventadors but in its highest state of tune, producing 566 kW (770 hp) at 8,500 rpm. Torque is 720 Nm. The 0-100 km/h time is 2.8 seconds. Top speed is 350 km/h.

The ALA System

The most significant technical innovation in the SVJ is the Aerodynamica Lamborghini Attiva (ALA) system – an active aerodynamics technology that adjusts front and rear aero elements electronically to manage downforce and drag. In standard operation, ALA provides downforce for stability in corners and reduces drag on straights. The system can also apply asymmetric downforce – more on one side than the other – to assist in cornering, effectively using aerodynamics as part of the yaw control system.

The result was the 6:44.97 Nürburgring lap time that made headlines in 2018, making the SVJ the fastest production car around that circuit at the time.

The V12 at Maximum

The 6.5-litre V12 in the SVJ is the most powerful naturally aspirated Lamborghini road car engine ever made. At 8,500 rpm, it produces a sound that is genuinely overwhelming – a layered, complex mechanical scream that no turbocharged or electrified engine has yet replicated. It is the singular reason many collectors seek out this specific car.

The V12 is also the source of the SVJ’s challenge. It has a relatively flat torque curve that demands commitment – the performance arrives at higher revs, and the car rewards drivers who are willing to work for it. The automated single-clutch transmission shifts quickly but not as smoothly as a dual-clutch unit. This combination means the SVJ requires more involvement and more skill than more recent supercars.

Australian Pricing and Production Numbers

Only 900 SVJ coupes and 800 SVJ Roadsters were built. Australian allocation amounted to a very small number of each – the coupe sold for approximately $950,000 to $1,100,000 new in Australia before options, with LCT adding significantly at that price point.

On the secondary market in 2026, SVJ coupes with reasonable kilometres are trading from approximately $1,000,000 to $1,300,000 in Australia. Well-specified examples in desirable colours command premiums. The SVJ Roadster, which was always more expensive new, now trades above the coupe on the used market.

The Collector Case

The SVJ represents the end of something genuinely important: the last naturally aspirated V12 Lamborghini flagship in the Aventador format. The Revuelto, while extraordinary, is a hybrid. The SVJ’s pure petrol V12 character is now unrepeatable in a new production Lamborghini.

This makes the SVJ a compelling collector proposition. Its values have been firm in Australia, and early examples are already being treated as investments by some owners. Low-kilometre, single-owner examples are the most sought after.

Verdict

The Lamborghini Aventador SVJ is the final, greatest chapter of a legendary model. It is not the easiest Lamborghini to drive, nor the most comfortable, nor the most efficient. It is the most extreme expression of a philosophy – maximum naturally aspirated V12 performance, maximum drama, maximum engagement – that Lamborghini has now moved away from. For those who can afford it, the SVJ is one of the most important Lamborghinis you can own.

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