Audi q4 e-tron

3 min read

New motor, faster charging and revised suspension for Audi’s popular electric SUV On sale Spring Price from £51,440

Neil Winn neil.winn@haymarket.com

FIRST DRIVE

BRING THE NOISE For £625, you can now equip your Q4 e-tron with a fake engine noise generator called e-tron Sport Sound. It adds a space-age hum as you accelerate, but we’d rather save our money and go without.

MAKING SALES PREDICTIONS when launching a new electric vehicle (EV) is a risky business, but when Audi launched its Q4 e-tron back in 2021, the company confidently proclaimed that its new electric family SUV would become its second best-selling model in the UK. Well, the results are in, and while the suits at Audi were perhaps a tad optimistic with their prediction, a third place overall in the company’s 2023 sales results is nothing to sniff at. Nor is the fact that the Q4 was Audi’s best-selling SUV full stop.

Job done, then? Well, not quite. The way Audi is operating at the moment is reminiscent of how it went about business in the late 1970s and 1980s, when former Audi boss Ferdinand Piëch encouraged his engineers to strive for perfection.

Indeed, just two years into the life cycle of the Q4, it has already been treated to a comprehensive update.

For starters, all models get a more efficient electric motor for their rear wheels. It’s the same one that’s used in the Volkswagen ID 7, and it means more power and a longer official range. The entry-level 45 still has the strongest stamina; in single-motor, rear-wheel-drive form, the updated car’s range rises from 316 to 330 miles, placing it right in the ballpark of the Kia EV6 (328 miles in our favourite RWD form) and Tesla Model Y Long Range (331 miles).

In terms of power, the Q4 e-tron 45 leaps from 201bhp to 282bhp (in both single-motor and four-wheel-drive quattro forms), and the 55 quattro is up from 295bhp to 335bhp.

But that’s not all; Audi has also taken the time to tweak the Q4’s suspension and steering. Both the standard suspension and the 15mm lower sports setup (fitted to S line models and above) promise a more comfortable ride, improved steering response and tighter body control than before.

We drove the updated rear-wheel-drive 45 and the 55 quattro (the former entry-level 35 has been discontinued) and were immediately struck by how much punchier the 45 now feels. With a 0-62mph time of just 6.7sec (6.6sec for the quattro), its performance is right up there with the EV6 RWD and Genesis GV60 Pr

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