<p>Within this work, an existing model of a Suzlon S111 2.1 MW turbine is used to estimate potential cost savings when the conventional upwind rotor concept is changed into a downwind rotor concept. A design framework is used to get realistic design updates for the upwind configuration as well as two design updates for the downwind configuration, including a pure material cost-out on the rotor blades and a new planform design. A full design load basis according to the standard has been used to evaluate the impact of the redesigns on the loads. A detailed cost model with load scaling is used to estimate the impact of the design changes on the turbine costs and the cost of energy. It is shown that generally lower blade mass can be achieved with the downwind configurations of up to 5 % less than the upwind redesign. Compared to an upwind baseline, the upwind redesign shows an estimated cost of energy reduction of 2.3 % where the downwind designs achieve a maximum reduction of 1.3 %.</p>