Mercedes-Benz EQE Review (2022-present)

Pros

  • Incredible interior

  • Roomy for passengers

  • Good to drive

Cons

  • Entry-level model lacks key equipment

  • Windscreen pillars limit visibility

  • No estate model offered

4/5Overall score
Practicality
Driving
Tech and equipment
Running costs
Mercedes-Benz EQE 350 front driving sunset

The CarGurus verdict

The Mercedes-Benz EQE is one of the longest-range EVs on the market, and it also has easy performance, decent rapid charging potential, supreme refinement and extreme modernity in the way it looks and feels.

Crucially, the EQE is also a car that feels very much a Mercedes-Benz, and one that is a convincing alternative to its own internal combustion engine choices. We’d like better visibility and rear passenger headroom, but there’s no doubting that the EQE is a worthy successor to the E-Class, and promises great things for the electric executive class as it evolves with the times.

Search for a Mercedes-Benz EQE on CarGurus

What is the Mercedes-Benz EQE?

Quite simply, the EQE is Mercedes-Benz’s battery electric E-Class, and it’s the future of the company. You might think that it looks a bit different than the German luxury car firm’s business saloon, and you’d be right; Mercedes-Benz produces its fully electric cars alongside its conventional internal combustion engine models, as a different model line.

The design is also, well... a bit odd, because it’s been honed for maximum efficiency, which explains the differing styling from the conventional E-Class. That slippery shape doesn’t just aid economy, but also refinement, with the EQE feeling airy inside, as well as supremely quiet.

The EQE also rides on the same, new bespoke electric vehicle architecture that underpins the EQS – dubbed the EVA2 platform. For the EQE the platform is shortened and contains a slightly smaller 90kWH lithium-ion battery. That’s still enough for an official WLTP range of over 400 miles on a full charge, with rapid charging at 170kW allowing the EQE to top up from 10% to 80% in around 32 minutes.

  • The EQE is charged via a CCS or Type 2 socket that’s in the car’s rear flank, where you’d expect the fuel filler cap to be on a petrol or diesel car. These are the European standard socket types that almost every electric car uses, and are compatible with the vast majority of public charging points across the UK and Western Europe.
  • As decent as the battery range is, a quick and easy charge will be what helps persuade customers over from internal combustion engine cars. The EQE will accept charge at a rate of 170kW from a rapid charger, and that’s enough to allow a 10%-80% charge in around 32 minutes. If you’ve only got 15 minutes to spare, that same fast charge can add as much as 155 miles. Charging simplicity is Mercedes-Benz’s aim, too, with its centralised payment/billing system meaning no fiddling about with apps and pre-payment at the various differing chargers/companies, which should mean ‘pull-up, plug-in’ convenience everywhere.
  • Despite the popularity of the estate version of the conventional E-Class, those wanting an EQE estate will be disappointed: it’s not expected in the model line-up, with the EQE SUV fulfilling that role instead. If you really want a premium electric estate, the Audi A6 e-tron is one of very few non-SUV options available to you, and the BMW i5 Touring is also due in a few years.

  • For maximum range: The Mercedes-Benz EQE 300 in basic AMG Line trim gets the best range, as it also gets the smallest wheels. We’d still urge you towards AMG Line Premium trim, though, as it gets an official combined WLTP range of 377 miles, which is not much of a sacrifice in range given the additional comforts (and re-sale values) that you get.
  • The fastest one: The Mercedes-AMG EQE 53 4Matic+. You can rely on Mercedes-AMG to take Mercedes-Benz’s models to another level with performance and that’s no different as the world charges towards electrification. Naturally, the 617bhp comes at the cost of range, but the 290-mile claimed range is still impressively usable despite the supercar performance on offer.
  • The best company car: The Mercedes EQE 300 AMG Line Premium. The slightly lesser performance isn’t likely to bother most drivers on a day-to-day basis, as it’s hardly a slouch. Spend the money you save by going for the entry-level powertrain, on going for the AMG Line Premium trim with its better equipment. If you can stretch to Premium Plus in order to get the head-up display and more, then it will feel like a usefully more hi-tech and luxurious car – albeit, also a much more expensive one.
Kyle Fortune
Published 15 Mar 2022 by Kyle Fortune
Freelance journalist Kyle Fortune has contributed to titles including Autocar, Auto Express, Top Gear, The Daily Telegraph and many more in over 20 years of writing about cars. He brings that insight to the CarGurus editorial team, testing everything from superminis to supercars, with the occasional van thrown in, too.
Vicky Parrott
Updated 29 Aug 2025 by Vicky Parrott
Vicky Parrott is a contributing editor at CarGurus. Vicky started her career at Autocar and spent a happy eight years there as a road tester and video presenter, before progressing to be deputy road test editor at What Car? magazine and Associate Editor for DrivingElectric. She's a specialist in EVs but she does also admit to enjoying a V8 and a flyweight.

Main rivals

Body styles

  • Four-door saloon