Model Y and BMW iX3 rival delivers a poor 300 miles of range and takes almost 8 seconds to hit 62 mph
Mazda has pulled the wraps off its new CX-6e electric SUV at the Brussels Motor Show and it’s easily the best-looking SUV the brand has done in years. But under the skin this premium EV is also years behind rivals from BMW and Audi.
The CX-6e isn’t a pure Mazda creation. Like the mechanically similar 6e sedan, it’s the result of a joint project with Changan and is built in China on the same line as the Deepal S07. Mazda has done the design, tuning and branding work, but the bones are very much shared.
Related: Mazda Goes All In On Huge Display And No Buttons For Its Latest SUV
The Chinese connection means it won’t make it to the US, but it lands in European showrooms later in 2026 where it will take on the Tesla Model Y, BMW iX3 and Audi Q6 e-tron. And it’ll probably cost three times what it does in China, where prices start at just $16,800.
Off The Pace
Under the 2,902 mm (114.3 inches) wheelbase is a 78 kWh LFP battery feeding a single rear motor making 258 hp (258 PS / 190 kW) and just 214 lb-ft (290 Nm) of torque. Mazda claims a WLTP range of up to 300 miles (483 km), which looks like a joke when Volvo this week revealed its similarly-sized EX60 will have up to 503 miles (810 km) of range. Even Tesla’s most basic Model Y Standard, a more accurate rival for the CX, gives you 314 miles (505 km) between charges.
The performance is nothing to get excited about, either. Zero to 62mph (100 kmh) takes 7.9 seconds, and while we’re talking speed, the 195 kW max charge rate is far from class-leading, meaning a 10 to 80 percent refill in about 24 minutes. AC charging tops out at 11 kW, which is on par with rivals, however.
Screens Everywhere, Buttons Nowhere
The interior is where the CX-6e really leans into the future. A huge 26 inch display stretches across the dash and a head up display removes the need for a traditional instrument cluster. Other tech highlights include gesture shortcuts, speakers in the headrests and screens for the camera-based door mirrors neatly embedded in the door cards.
Size-wise, the CX-6e is longer and wider than the combustion CX-60 but it can’t touch the ICE SUV or its electric rivals for cargo space. The EV only offers 468 litres (16.5 cu-ft) compared with 570 liters (20.1 cu-ft) in the CX-60, and over 850 litres (30 cu-ft) in a Model Y, though you do also get an 80-liter (2.8 cu-ft) frunk for cables, which you don’t in the Tesla.
Style Over Substance.
We think the CX-6e looks great inside and out, but that style and the still-TBC prices might have to do a lot of heavy lifting to make buyers overlook the poor range, performance and practicality.
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Chris is a seasoned automotive journalist with over two decades of experience. He has worked… Read full bio












