This is a comparison of battery electric vehicles.
Battery capacity | Range | Consumption | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nominal | Usable | EPA | WLTP | EPA | WLTP | |
Kia e-Soul (64 kWh 2019) | 64 kWh[1] | 452 km[1] | 157 Wh/km[1] | |||
Volkswagen ID.3 (Pure 202X) | 48 kWh | 45 kWh[2] | 330 km[2] | |||
Volkswagen ID.3 (Pro/1st 2020) | 62 kWh | 58 kWh[2] | 420 km[2] | |||
Volkswagen ID.3 (Pro S 202X) | 82 kWh | 77 kWh[2] | 550 km[2] | |||
Volkswagen ID.4 1st (2020) | 82 kWh[3] | 77 kWh[3] | 496 km[3] |
The amount of range gained per time charging, charging speed, is the ratio of charging power to the vehicle's consumption, and its inverse is the charging time per driven distance:
The triple bar equality symbolizes that these measures, equivalent as they are, are both meaningful as instantaneous values, not only as averages. Typically, charging power varies with state of charge and battery temperature over a charging session.
Max charging power | Min charging time per driven distance | Fastest driven | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
@ EPA consumption | @ WLTP consumption | 1000 km | 24 hours | ||
Tesla Model 3 (Long Range AWD Performance) | 250 kW | 0.72 h/1000 km (@ 180 Wh/km) | 100.0 km/h (10:00 h)[4][5] | ||
Tesla Model 3 (Long Range AWD) | 115 km/h (2781 km)[6] | ||||
Tesla Model X 100D (Long Range 2019) | 97.6 km/h (10:20 h)[4][5] | ||||
Audi e-tron 55 Quattro (2018) | 97.6 km/h (10:20 h)[4][5] | ||||
Volkswagen ID.3 (1st Plus 58 kWh 2020) | 94.6 km/h (10:34 h)[7] | ||||
Mercedes EQC 400 (2019) | 90.9 km/h (11:00 h)[4][5] | ||||
Hyundai Kona Electric (64 kWh 2018) | 87.0 km/h (11:30 h)[4][5] | ||||
Polestar 2 (Performance 2020) | 87.0 km/h (11:30 h)[4][5] | ||||
Kia e-Soul (64 kWh 2019) | 77 kW[1] | 2.04 h/1000 km (@ 157 Wh/km) | |||
Hyundai Ioniq Electric (28 kWh 2017) | 70 kW[8] | 2.24 h/1000 km (@ 157 Wh/km) | 81.6 km/h (12:15 h)[4][5] | ||
Jaguar I-Pace (EV320 90kWh 2020) | 100 kW | 3.21 h/1000 km @ 321 Wh/km | 81.6 km/h (12:15 h)[9] | ||
Peugeot e-208 (2020) | 80.0 km/h (12:30 h)[4][5] | ||||
Nissan Leaf (62 kWh 2019) | 70.6 km/h (14:10 h)[4][5] | ||||
Hyundai Ioniq Electric (38 kWh 2019) | 69.8 km/h (14:20 h)[4][5] | ||||
Renault Zoe ZE50 (2019) | 68.6 km/h (14:35 h)[4][5] | ||||
MG ZS EV (44.5 kWh 2020) | 68.2 km/h (14:40 h)[4][5] | ||||
Volkswagen e-Golf (35.8 kWh 2017) | 63.2 km/h (15:50 h)[4][5] | ||||
Honda e (2020) | 62.5 km/h (16:00 h)[4][5] |
Tow hook or other rear attachment | Roof rails | Ski hatch or separately foldable mid back seat | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Towing capacity | Alternative rear mounting | |||
Tesla Model X | 2250 kg | — | No | No |
Tesla Model 3 | 910 kg (Europe) | — | Mounting accessory | No |
Polestar 2 | 1500 kg | — | Optional | Yes |
Audi e-tron 55 Quattro | 1800 kg[10] | — | Optional | Yes |
Mercedes EQC 400 (2019) | 1800 kg[10] | — | Optional | Yes |
Volkswagen ID.3 (2020) | No | bike rack | No | Yes |
Volkswagen ID.4 1st (2020) | 1000 kg[3] | — | Yes[3] | Yes[3] |