2023 Audi Q8 e-tron new car review
A German brand has launched its new electric vehicle, but despite some big improvements there are still some baffling results.
Buyers of the new Audi Q8 e-tron will feel like Christmas has come early.
Gifts include six years of free public charging, scheduled servicing and roadside assist, as well as a free, fully installed home charger.
The obvious sweeteners are designed to claw back EV market share from arch rivals Mercedes-Benz and BMW, which are streets ahead in the sales race.
This new Q8 e-tron, available in SUV wagon or sleeker Sportback guise, replaces the e-tron SUV. It was Audi’s first EV, but as the brand has stuck the e-tron badge on all its electric cars, it’s high time to make things clearer.
Audi’s EVs are still reserved for the well-heeled. While rivals such as Mercedes, BMW, Volvo and Lexus sell electric cars for less than $100,000, these Q8 e-trons start from $153,900 plus on-roads.
Audi’s other full EV is the gorgeous e-tron GT grand tourer, yours from $178,875 before costs. At these prices, the Audi EV ownership club will remain an exclusive one.
But if you’ve got the coin, the luxe-heavy, slickly-styled and large five-seater plays to Audi’s strengths. It offers enough to impress and entice but doesn’t push boundaries.
It isn’t as extrovertly styled as a BMW iX and there’s not the electric range or cabin theatre of a Mercedes-Benz EQE. Instead, the Q8 e-tron’s a safe pair of hands. It impresses without wowing.
The battery’s a monster at 106kWh, almost twice that of an entry-level Tesla Model 3, yet its quoted range is just 454km. That same Tesla’s is 513km.
When the Q8 e-tron was first announced, 600km range was mooted for the slippier Sportback version. But Audi’s since moved to the more real-world WLTP range test, and claims only 454km. The brand says this is a “worst case scenario,” that involves the Q8 riding on range-sapping 22-inch alloys.
As standard, the Q8 SUV rides on 20s, while Sportback and Launch Editions ($165,900) are on 21s.
Our test drives recorded wildly different energy use. Official consumption is 25.6kWh/100km, but we fluctuated between 33kWh and less than 20kWh, with hills in particular chewing into range.
All Q8 e-trons feature air suspension, with a ride-height adjustment range of 76mm. Seven drive modes allow drivers to raise the height for a better ride on shoddy surfaces, then lower it for a more planted, road-hugging feel on highways and twisting roads.
It never feels uncomfortably stiff, while cornering and turning in well, despite a 2520kg kerb weight. Its lengthy driver assist package is generally excellent, but overzealous steering assist spoils any natural feel through the steering wheel.
The brakes, too, feel unnatural – nothing unusual for an EV – especially when you plump for maximum regeneration. It’s a smoother, more Audi-like drive without it, so the temptation’s there to keep it off.
With 300kW and 664Nm it’s fast, but not mind-bending. It takes 5.6 seconds to reach 100km/h using Boost mode, with linear, smooth power delivery from motors over each axle.
The cabin is superb, coated in expensive-feeling Valcona leather and with brushed aluminium inlays and Audi’s trio of dash screens. Having a huge navigation map in the digital driver display is excellent, but the climate control screen needs a good prod before it offers feedback and action.
Rear headroom is excellent, leg room is average but material quality is top-notch. If only the back seats reclined it’d feel more business class – this being a five- and not seven-seater there’s ample space to allow it.
Audi throws in ambient lighting, four-zone climate control (Sportback), heated seats, a 360-degree camera and wireless charging but asks $6900 for a 22kWh on-board charger, $3400 for a glass sunroof and $3500 for “virtual” mirrors where screens and cameras replace side mirrors. Don’t do it – they’re an unnecessary faff that don’t improve on glass.
Charging performance is up 20kW to 170kW, so 10 to 80 per cent battery charge is achieved in 31 minutes at a public DC charger. At home with AC charging? Audi’s not provided a time, but put your feet up, it’s a big battery.
VERDICT 3.5/5
It’s pricey, heavy and the electric range isn’t great but the silky drive and luxurious tech-rich cabin help it shine.
AUDI Q8 55 E-TRON
PRICE: About $161,000 drive-away (about $174,000 drive-away Sportback)
ENGINE: Twin electric motor, 300kW and 664Nm combined
BATTERY: 114kWh (106kWh usable)
RANGE: 454km
WARRANTY/SERVICE: Five-year, unlimited km/six years free servicing
SAFETY: Auto emergency braking, lane-keep and blind-spot assist, rear cross-traffic alert, radar cruise
THIRST: 25.6kWh/100km
LUGGAGE: 569 litres (528 in Sportback)
SPARE: Space saver