UPDATE: Audi has locked-in pricing for the medium-sized Q4 E-Tron electric SUV.
The four-strong Q4 E-Tron range starts at $88,300 for the 45 grade (in Sportback or wagon body styles) with a 77kWh battery, single 210kW electric motor, a power tailgate, and LED headlights.
Audi's Sportback 55 E-Tron flagship costs $109,500 before on-road costs and gets twin motors with 250kW outputs, S Line exterior styling, Matrix LED headlights, and more.
The built-in-Brussels Q4 E-Tron is a rival for the Chinese-made BMW iX3 and German-built Mercedes-Benz EQC.
Audi is yet to lock in final Q4 E-Tron specification, so read on below for pricing, product highlights, and to see what changes Audi made during the Q4 E-Tron update.
2024 Audi Q4 E-Tron pricing
Model | Price (before on-road costs) |
---|---|
Q4 45 E-Tron | $88,300 |
Q4 Sportback 45 E-Tron | $88,300 |
Q4 55 E-Tron | $108,500 |
Q4 Sportback 55 E-Tron | $109,500 |
2024 Audi Q4 E-Tron 45 and Sportback 45 features
77kWh usable battery | 135kW DC fast-charging |
520L boot | Augmented reality head-up display |
LED headlights | Metallic paint |
Power tailgate | Audi virtual cockpit |
Leather upholstery with front seat heating | Tri-zone climate control |
2024 Audi Q4 E-Tron 55 and Sportback 55 features
Twin motor AWD with 250kW/679Nm | 0-100km/h in 5.4 seconds |
175kW DC fast-charging | Matrix LED headlights |
S Line exterior styling | Progressive steering |
Sports front seats | Colour ambient lighting |
Our original story, below, continues unchanged
September 2023: Updated Audi Q4 E-Tron confirmed for Australia
There have been rumours of the Audi Q4 E-Tron coming to Australia since the SUV’s launch in 2021, but it’s now been confirmed to coincide with a global update. First customer deliveries are expected to arrive in mid-2024.
Snapshot
- Faster charging, more powerful, longer range Audi Q4 E-Tron revealed
- Australian release now confirmed for mid-2024
- Pricing and features yet to be announced
It’s a similar strategy Volkswagen employed in holding its ID.3 back for our market to coincide with the update’s launch and, despite being late to the party, may benefit both manufacturers in the long run.
In fact, Audi’s local team admitted that the announcement timing – coinciding with the Melbourne EV show – has worked out rather nicely. It follows business cases being put forward by the Australian team after early production issues and countries with CO2 mandates were prioritised.
Audi hopes to secure stronger volumes of the Q4 E-Tron in both Sportback and wagon body styles than the trickle of Q8 E-Trons (neé E-Tron SUV) that have arrived in Oz.
It’s a fair assumption that the Q4 E-Tron will be more popular than Audi’s bigger EVs. It’s keenly priced in its Europe home market, with the new entry-level E-Tron 45 costing the equivalent of AU$88,000 in Germany.
It will compete with the BMW iX3 and Mercedes-Benz EQC, as well as high-end variants of the Tesla Model Y and Volkswagen ID.4/ID.5.
What’s new for the Q4 E-Tron?
The range has been restructured with the short-range 35 dropped. The E-Tron 40, meanwhile, is replaced by the 45 in both single and twin-motor guises, while the dual-motor E-Tron 50 becomes the 55.
All models are therefore equipped with a 77kWh usable battery (82kWh gross) that’s now able to charge from 10-80 per cent as fast at 28 minutes for Quattro models (capable of 170kW DC, while non-Quattros are limited to 135kW DC).
The longest driving range accolade belongs to the rear-drive E-Tron 45 Sportback at 562km in WLTP testing, up from 534km in the pre-update model. Along with a bigger battery, improvements can be attributed to enhanced battery cooling and optimised software.
A new permanently excited synchronous motor is mounted on the rear axle producing 210kW (up 60kW) in the E-Tron 45, good for a 6.7-seconds 0-100km/h sprint. The 45 E-Tron Quattro matches those outputs and acceleration but with two motors. The amped 55 Quattro models, meanwhile, develop 250kW and hit the tonne in 5.4 seconds.
Also new is a 15mm lower sport suspension package. Across the range, Audi has massaged the damping, spring, and steering characteristics to improve the Q4 E-Tron’s driving experience.
Audi has worked on the E-Tron’s camera and radar systems, and the adaptive cruise control/lane-trace assist systems can now work in tandem with the blind-spot monitor for automatic lane changes at speeds between 90-130km/h on the freeway.
The interior has been left largely alone, though all models now get the larger touchscreen and digital driver’s display, and a battery route planner in the connected navigation. A new synthesised ‘character sound’ also gives the Q4 E-Tron a unique identity.
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