2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron charges ahead of the rest

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  • Q6 E-Tron EV is Audi’s first on PPE platform shared with Porsche
  • Arrives before the end of the year in Q6 and SQ6 forms
  • California drive suggested around 300 miles from 100 kwh isn’t a stretch
  • Roomy, comfortable interior and good ride quality; quirky regenerative braking

With its 2025 Q6 E-Tron lineup, Audi is helping solve a pesky logic problem that has plagued the whole round of electric sport-utility vehicle entries from German luxury brands over the past few years. 

SUVs are today’s family vehicles of choice, and luxury brands love pointing out that time is the new luxury. 

Then, why are so many luxury electric SUVs time bandits, leaving you to spend more time in the outer fringes of big-box parking lots charging up for the next stretch on the highway—while those in mass-market Teslas, Hyundais, and Kias come and go?

The German luxury establishment might finally get it, and is fixing this conundrum with next-generation EVs. But Porsche aside, Audi’s the only one here right now with circa-20-minute charging in a roomy-but-not humongous two-row luxury vehicle. 

In a first drive experience last week in the 2025 Audi Q6, I didn’t go far enough to warrant a road-trip charge; but it helped underscore that this new vehicle family is far better at avoiding a charging stop than its Q4 E-Tron and Q8 E-Tron predecessors.

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

Q6 E-Tron family is mostly over the 300-mile mark

The Audi Q6 E-Tron family’s driving range spans from 321 miles for the rear-wheel-drive Q6 E-tron, to 307 miles in E-Tron Quattro (dual-motor all-wheel-drive) form, to 275 miles in SQ6 E-Tron Quattro form. 

Over an 83-mile drive with the Q6 E-Tron Quattro and a 102-mile drive in the SQ6—both emphasizing a combination of tightly curved Sonoma two-laners with short stints on US-101, we averaged 3.0 miles per kwh overall. That’s an excellent result considering we were also driving to explore the ride, handling, and overall dynamics of the vehicle without a lot of heed given to efficient driving. It should also be noted that we saw 2.9 mi/kwh in the Q6 E-Tron and 3.1 mi/kwh in the SQ6—perhaps more an indication of some additional afternoon traffic than anything else. 

Audi says that compared to the Q8 E-Tron, the Q6 E-Tron has a 33% improvement in performance and a 30% reduction in energy consumption. A shift to an 800 volts for the battery and propulsion system, borrowing wisdom from the Porsche Taycan and related Audi E-Tron GT, is at the core of the boost in efficiency and range, which makes the charging gains all the more meaningful. 

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

Audi Q6 E-Tron aims for middle, makes it lux

The Q6 E-Tron slots right into the heart of Audi’s lineup, especially right into the middle of its North American lineup. It’s about eight inches longer than the Q4 E-Tron and a foot shorter than the Audi Q8 E-Tron, but it ends up feeling nearly as big inside as the latter. While its 187.8 inches of overall length and 113.7-inch wheelbase are only 3.5 and 2.7 inches greater than that of the Q5 gasoline SUV, respectively—with less than a couple inches extra in overall height and width—the Q6 feels almost a size larger. 

Those packaging advantages over the Q5 are made possible by what the Q6 was built on. It’s Audi’s launch vehicle for Premium Platform Electric (PPE), a dedicated EV platform that doesn’t allow for combustion-engine space and aims for reduced component dimensions and weight, plus strong performance. Initially shared with the Porsche Macan Electric, PPE is set to be utilized by the Q6 Sportback and A6 sedan, both on the way next year. 

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

The packaging isn’t perfect as the rear door cuts are a little too short. While it means a little wedging for taller folks to get in (or a smaller space for leaning in on tots), there was plenty of space for this 6-foot-6 beanpole to sit behind myself. 

The floor is low, signaling some smart packaging choices with the battery pack, and there’s a 2.3-cubic-foot frunk that’s about the right size for a large daypack or carry-on—or stashing your mobile charge cord. In back, you get 30.2 cubic feet of cargo space with the rear seatbacks up, or 60.2 cubic feet with them flipped forward—a significant amount more than the Q5’s 25.9 and 54.1 cubic feet.

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

 

Q6 E-Tron batteries, motors, and more

What’s underneath? Keeping the battery pack modestly sized was a great start. Adding up to 100 kwh gross, or 94.4 kwh usable, it’s configured around 12 modules and 15 prismatic cells per module—for a total of 180 cells. It’s less complex versus the Q8 E-Tron’s 36 modules and 432 total cells, and the new pack allows individual modules to be easily replaced.

All models have a permanent-magnet motor at the rear wheels, and versions with Quattro all-wheel drive get an induction motor up front. That essentially allows the front motor to be switched off, without drag, in cruising and light coasting situations, and silicon-carbide power electronics save weight and energy here, too.

While the battery capacity may be the same, Audi is using two different EV battery cell chemistries from two different global suppliers, Samsung SDI and CATL. Their lithium-nickel-cobalt-aluminum oxide (NCA) and nickel-manganese-cobalt (NMC) cells, due to slight variations in optimizing the charge, get to 80% in 22 or 21 minutes, respectively. Quattro and SQ6 versions getting the NMC cells for their slightly better tolerance of heat in performance situations. 

2025 Audi SQ6 E-Tron

2025 Audi SQ6 E-Tron

Q6 E-Tron charging, brake regen

Fast-charging peaks at 260 and 270 kw, respectively, for these packs, when using the 350-kw CCS DC fast-charging connectors that are increasingly common in the U.S. An adapter for Tesla NACS connectors is set to arrive in the next year. On DC fast-charging equipment limited to less than 800 volts—like much of the Tesla Supercharger network at present—Audi has enabled 400V charging at a peak of around 135 kw by running the pack as two parallel 400-volt packs, allowing that 10-80% charge in around 35 minutes. Audi says that with a predictive thermal-management system and battery-management controller developed for this platform, fast-charges will be quicker and more efficient, and it’s planning to add a manual preconditioning setting for the U.S. (to allow for stations that aren’t yet in route planning, for instance). 

For home charging, the 9.6-kw onboard charger allows you to tap into charge ports on either side of the vehicle (DC only on the driver’s side). On a 50-amp circuit, a full charge should take no more than 10 hours. 

The Q6 E-Tron sends a lot of energy back to the battery every time you slow or stop; but it’s a different approach than what you’ll find in many other EVs. In its default settings, the Q6 lineup likes to glide when you lift off the accelerator, unless you deliberately select other settings at each key cycle. Audi points out that it has stepped up the actual brake regeneration that you tap into when stepping on the brake pedal, to a maximum of 0.30 g, a level at which many stops only use the friction pads in the last few feet. 

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

Shift to drive and the default setting takes you to an Auto deceleration mode that is a bit of a black box. It taps into inputs from the forward-facing camera, including the distance to vehicles ahead, as well as traffic and navigation data, making decisions about the curves along the road ahead. Along the way, it uses unpredictable levels of regen that aren’t confirmed on the dash as you lift off the accelerator. Attempting to glide around a roundabout, for instance, resulted in an unexpected ramp-up in regen. 

You do have choices, though, and it’s the way to go. In drive, you can use the steering-wheel paddles to click through levels 0, 1, and 2, ranging from a flat-neutral coast, to 0.06 g (about like a gasoline car in drive), to 0.15 g (think downshifting one gear). Select “B” on the very odd shift selector—one of my peeves with this vehicle—and you dial up a completely different personality, with a full 0.25 g of regen when you lift off the accelerator. 

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

Audi Q6 E-Tron price and value

The 2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron Quattro I spent much of the day with started at $67,095, including the $1,295 destination fee, and added the $6,800 Prestige package, $1,300 Warm Weather package (leather upholstery, cooled front seats, Bang & Olufsen audio), and $1,000 20-inch wheel package. That brought the total as tested to $76,195.

The Quattro is right in the middle of the lineup, and it makes 456 hp in its launch mode and can get to 60 mph in 4.9 seconds. Rear-wheel-drive Q6 E-Tron versions make 322 hp and take 6.3 seconds. SQ6 E-Tron bumps power to 509 hp and can get from 0-60 mph in 4.1 seconds. 

The Prestige package, which I didn’t test a Q6 E-Tron without, adds three features that might change the fundamental feel of the vehicle: adaptive dampers, an air suspension, and acoustic glass in front. 

The Q6 E-Tron doesn’t feel tuned like a performance vehicle, and I noted a fair amount of pitchiness that got in the way of backroad poise. This isn’t a vehicle that invites curvy roads. Despite all the weight-saving measures in the propulsion system, this vehicle weighs nearly 5,300 pounds—but the air suspension and buttoned-down damping do help calm big body motions under hard acceleration and strong braking, making it feel very confident overall.  

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

But as I note in a companion review of the 2025 Audi SQ6 over at Motor Authority, what amounts to a collective set of tuning and hardware differences creates a very different-feeling vehicle that I actually enjoyed driving much more—and it’s only modestly more expensive. 

It’s hard to tell what additional noise the acoustic front glass helps quell, as the Q6 E-Tron is very quiet inside, so quiet that it made me question why Audi has three simulated propulsion noise levels inside, with none of them completely off. 

Q6 E-Tron family gets all-new interface

The Prestige package also includes some head-turning personalized OLED exterior lighting, plus a noteworthy piece of technology in front of the passenger—a 10.9-inch front passenger display, with an active privacy filter, that lets the passenger view, communicate, or play DJ. 

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

2025 Audi Q6 E-Tron

It’s all part of a revamped interface the brand is calling the Audi Digital Stage that wraps a 11.9-inch configurable cockpit screen with a 14.5-inch OLED touchscreen in a curved panoramic design. It also includes an augmented reality head-up display that seems to jam a lot of info in front of the driver (I turned it off, but appreciated the directional lighting within the dash). This setup shifts seemingly all of the climate controls into the screen area, but over the course of a day’s drive I found most of the controls quite intuitive thanks to a basic menu of icons on the left rail signifying items like sound, navigation, phone, and the like. 

Audi has also added a new AI-informed digital assistant that can perform some tasks (like turning down the very strong heated seats) flawlessly, and it doesn’t appear to need a data connection for everything. 

While the Q8 E-Tron (and its E-Tron SUV predecessor) was among the first electric SUVs on the market—a full year before the Tesla Model Y—Audi has shown it’s learned and improved in nearly every respect with the Q6 E-Tron and its underlying PPE platform. For those holding out for better-driving, longer-range, faster-charging luxury EVs, they’re here.

Audi paid for travel and lodging for Green Car Reports to bring you this firsthand report.



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