Jaguar Land Rover Factory Shut: This Is The Reason

Written By: Neeraj Padmakumar
Published: September 27, 2025 at 07:14 AMUpdated: Updated: September 27, 2025 at 07:14 AM
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Britain’s largest automotive employer, Jaguar Land Rover (JLR), has been forced to shut down several of its production facilities after a cyberattack on August 31 threw its IT backbone into disarray. According to the latest reports, the production is expected to stay suspended at least till October 1, 2025. The joint venture in China, however, remains operational. Let’s take a closer look at the crisis and how it may pan out in the upcoming months.

Jaguar Land Rover Factories Shut: Details

land rover factory shut reasons explained

The crisis started when JLR’s IT systems were shut down in early September. Attempts to restart these failed, and soon a hack was confirmed. Some call it a ransomware attack. An official confirmation on the nature is yet to surface.

The company soon realized the scale of this security breach. Within hours, it suspended operations at its factories in the UK, Slovakia, Brazil, and India. The production has remained paralysed ever since.

The attack has reportedly disrupted vital systems, including the production software. The computer-aided design (CAD), engineering software, and product life-cycle software have been affected. The company is now working on getting the completed cars shipped. Production will stay paused until a proper fix is implemented to free the systems from the attack and its influence.

jaguar land rover factory assembly line

Now, the Solihull factory is running short shifts with skeleton staff. Some basic maintenance works are also known to be underway. The production halt has directly affected over 33,000 employees ( many of these are assembly line workers), and over 200,000 people working in various sections of the supply chain.

Small businesses relying on JLR are also reporting increasing losses and employee layoffs. Many suppliers have already paused production, and more will consider the same if the uncertainty continues.

A Major Blow To The Leadership

adrian mardell jaguar land rover ceo

For CEO Adrian Mardell, this could not have come at a worse time. After steering the company to 11 straight quarters of profit under the ‘Reimagine’ strategy (unaffected by Trump’s tariffs and the Russia-Ukraine war), he had been preparing for a smooth handover before stepping down.

Instead, Mardell now faces the biggest test of his reign- restarting JLR’s crippled operations while protecting jobs and reputations. He met the business and trade minister Chris Bryant last week to discuss the situation.

Voices from within the industry say that the attack will cast a shadow over his legacy, and will possibly delay the launch of models like the new electric Range Rover and the (controversial) new Jaguar.

Questions Over Outsourced Cybersecurity

Adding fuel to the fire are questions about JLR’s IT outsourcing deal with Tata Consultancy Services (TCS). The carmaker handed over large parts of its digital operations to TCS in a five-year, £800 million contract last year, including cybersecurity. As soon as the attack was detected, TCS staff scrambled to trace the source of intrusion.

JLR runs a complex, interconnected factory system. This made it difficult to isolate factories or functions after the intrusion was detected. Now, with the entire network compromised, critics are questioning whether over-centralisation made JLR more vulnerable.

Some people have also been speculating about similarities in the nature of this hack and those of earlier ones at UK retailers Marks & Spencer and the Co-op, both of which used TCS systems. For now, these remain mere speculations...

What Happens Next?

land rover defender 110

JLR says its teams are working round the clock with cybersecurity experts, the UK’s National Cyber Security Centre, and law enforcement to fix the damage. A workaround with the Department for Transport and the DVLA (Drivers and Vehicles Licensing Agency) has allowed thousands of completed cars to reach buyers. But restarting production will be far more complex.

Each day of production-halt extension will cost the company millions of pounds in lost revenue. Jaguar Land Rover insists it has the financial strength to survive the storm, with access to about £6 billion in cash. Yet for its suppliers, every passing week without production raises existential risks. Calls for government intervention are growing louder, with unions pushing for a furlough-style scheme to protect jobs.

For now, the automaker is clouded with uncertainty. Whether the shutdown lasts weeks or stretches into months, one thing is certain- Jaguar Land Rover’s cyberattack has exposed just how fragile modern car-making can be when technology falters...