The smallest Rolls-Royce in the world needs to be assembled by hand

  • This is the world’s smallest Rolls-Royce, the Cameo
  • It’s a bite-sized version of an actual roadster car
  • You need to build it yourself by hand if you get one

Published on Dec 07, 2024 at 6:00 PM (UTC+4)
by Siddharth Dudeja

Last updated on Dec 03, 2024 at 6:44 PM (UTC+4)
Edited by Tom Wood

There’s a new Rolls in town called the Cameo – it is by far the world’s smallest Rolls-Royce ever made, and you need to assemble it yourself by hand.

It’s not only bite-sized but perhaps the cutest example made by the British luxury automaker.

‘Cute’ and Rolls-Royce don’t often go together because most cars are bold and subtle, but this is an exception.

As you might have guessed already, the Cameo is a super-expensive art piece that you might even consider a toy.

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The Cameo is the world’s smallest Rolls-Royce

The British automaker is just in time for the holiday season to unveil its new offering for the masses, with the only catch being that it’s not an actual roadster.

Although it certainly looks like one, the Cameo sadly doesn’t feature an engine.

Unlike this homemade wooden six-wheeler Rolls-Royce, it’s a miniature version and nowhere near the size of an actual car.

However, that might be its only downside because the rest of the package is pretty impressive.

Why is that, you ask?

For starters, the automaker offers the Cameo’s buyers to witness the process of building an actual Rolls-Royce car in a miniature form.

If you buy a standard road-going Rolls, you can visit the automaker to watch the body being mounted on the drivetrain.

In this case, however, you have a solid oak body and a polished aluminum part that join together to give off the two-tone finish.

The devil is in the details

As cliché as all that might sound, it might just turn out to be a fun experience, to say the least.

Moreover, you get the full package here — the same leather used in the real cars, a heavily-detailed interior, and most of the same materials make an appearance inside the Cameo.

Additionally, the world’s smallest Rolls-Royce isn’t the automaker’s first unusual creation.

We’ve previously seen the carmaker come up with unique design ideas like this ‘wheelless’ futuristic Rolls.

Or the more recent Phantom inspired by James Bond’s Goldfinger, for that matter.

All things considered, the Cameo certainly stands out, and all for good reason.

The price tag is somewhere north of $5,000 according to a local dealer’s listing in the UK, which seems relatively fair.

In comparison to this $100,000 Aston Martin model car, at least.

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Siddharth is a tech nerd with a secret love of all things cars. He has been writing for a few years now, and on his free time you would find him gaming when he's not procrastinating.