Xpeng is yet another Chinese EV company you likely haven’t heard of but ought to know about. Only a decade old, it already produces five different vehicles, employs 15,000 people, and has the capacity to ramp up to 600,000 cars per year. It began its expansion from China into Europe in 2021.
It’s also working on an eVTOL aircraft built to ferry two passengers across city skylines, and has a partnership with Volkswagen, which owns a 5 percent stake, to develop a pair of EVs due to arrive in 2026.
Xpeng currently makes the P5 and P7 sedans, the G9 SUV (which we were mighty impressed with), and a seven-seat MPV called the X9. This new G6 slots in below the G9, and is positioned as a direct rival to the best-selling Tesla Model Y. It’s coming to several European countries right away, with the brand launching in the UK, Ireland, Spain, Portugal, Greece, and Iceland in the second half of 2024.
Majoring on simplicity, there are just three variants of G6 to pick from. All come fully loaded, complete with a panoramic roof, heated seats front and rear (the fronts are also ventilated), an 18-speaker and 960-watt sound system with noise cancellation, two wireless phones chargers with integrated cooling, a heat pump, and, much like Kia and Hyundai, 800-volt charging with a vehicle-to-load function delivering up to 3.3 kW of power to domestic appliances.
All buyers need to do is pick from the five paint options (retina-searing orange, black, white, gray, or silver), choose between a black or white faux leather interior, and decide whether they want a tow bar or not. That's it. The German manufacturers, with their love of charging for every conceivable additional feature, should pay attention.
Three Gs
The three variants of G6 start with the RWD Standard, which has a 66-kWh battery pack that sends power to a single motor on the rear axle. This produces 258 horsepower and 440 Nm of torque, which is enough to hit 62 mph in a claimed 6.9 seconds.
Range is 270 miles WLTP, and Xpeng claims a 10 to 80 percent charge time of 20 minutes at up to 215 kW. Prices start at €43,000 ($46,300) in the Netherlands, where this brand-hosted drive event took place. Important point: This EV costs €2,990 less the Tesla Model Y.
Next up is the €48,000 RWD Long Range. This car sticks with the single-motor layout but increases the net battery capacity to 87.5 kWh, and the power is upped slightly to 286 horsepower while torque stays the same. The result is a slightly sprightlier 0-62 mph time of 6.7 seconds, while WLTP range jumps to 354 miles. Maximum charge rate also increases, to 280 kW, so it too can fill from 10 to 80 percent in a claimed 20 minutes.