Best Electric Cars to Buy Right Now.
With every day that goes by, the electric car market looks more like, well, the regular car market. Just a few years ago, EV options could be counted on one hand: Bolt, Leaf, Tesla, the end. Conduct that same tally today, and drivers bent on buying electric now have 39 cars to choose from, including six new options this year. Factor in all the available trims and variations — body styles, bigger batteries, etc. — and you’re looking at 117 distinct models.
But what’s notable about the newest crowd of electric options is its breadth: There’s a six-figure SUV, a mid-market family truck, a historic Cadillac and a Mercedes sedan for the everyman.
In short, the EV market is no longer driven by superlatives — the quickest, the cheapest, the fanciest. Rather, it’s defined by idiosyncrasies: designers and engineers tuning their products ever more precisely to find a particular buyer. Ten years ago (even five years ago!) the EV buyer fell into one bucket. Now that pool is big enough to contain multitudes.
Is a car from the new class right for you? Here are the highlights.
Nissan Ariya | The Everyman’s EV
The long-awaited Ariya is the most affordable of the bunch, with a window sticker starting at $43,190. If the midsize SUV has any of the sales mojo of the Nissan Leaf, its (much older) sibling, the Ariya may soon be one of the best-selling machines on the market.
Critically, Nissan has done with the Ariya what incumbent auto giants are great at: configuring it in a dizzying array of options. Add up the different trim levels and battery choices and one will find nine different Ariyas on offer, a veritable choose-your-own-Ariya-adventure.
Discover Nissan collection on BitCars.
Audi Q4 e-tron | The Tesla Fighter
The Q4 e-tron is another sub-$50,000 entrant, pulling the swanky brand slightly down-market. While it lacks some of the polish and performance of its predecessors (the e-tron, e-tron GT, and e-tron Sportback), this model does offer similar range with a smaller battery, making it the greenest Audi in the lineup. It should go head to head with higher-end versions of the Ford Mustang Mach-E, which has become one of the segment’s top sellers.
Explore Audi selection, send your request.
Cadillac Lyriq | The Design Play
The Lyriq is leading Cadillac’s charge to electric with one of the boldest designs in the business. A bona fide SUV, this electric Caddy makes a statement with a sleek grille veined with LED lights and a teardrop-shaped rear end, which increases both cargo space and aerodynamics. The Lyriq isn't as sporty as some of its rivals, but at $62,990 it is far more affordable than the rest of the luxury EV field. If Cadillac is around 50 years from now, auto dorks will bookmark this as one of the major reasons why.
BitCars Team can find almost any car for you. Just send your request.
Mercedes EQB SUV, EQS SUV, EQE sedan |Good, Better, Best
Mercedes is going full blitzkrieg with three all-new EVs: the EQB SUV, EQS SUV and EQE sedan. The carmaker bills the EQB as “resourceful,” and starting at $52,750, it will no doubt prove resourceful in stealing a tide of would-be Tesla buyers. However, the beginner Benz comes with a smaller battery than its siblings, and all three have ranges under 300 miles.
The EQS SUV arrives in more expensive territory, as a Costco-capable follow-up to the brand’s EQS sedan. Although it’s priced the same — around $104,000 — the truck is far less efficient, and thus less green, than its predecessor. The ski moms and soccer dads, however, may not care overly much.
Finally, Mercedes has delivered a third new EV smack between the other two. The EQE sedan starts around $86,000, with a battery pack and range figures squarely in the middle of the EQB and EQS.
Explore Mercedes-Benz collection and buy with Crypto.
Source: Bloomberg