Mercedes-Benz is deep into development of the seventh-generation E-Class, an all-electric sedan slated to land in the UK in 2027—and positioned as the spiritual and literal successor to today’s EQE. Only this one promises real E-Class practicality, a 500-mile range, and a return to the classic three-box silhouette that Benz buyers have trusted for decades.

But here’s the twist:
Mercedes isn’t replacing the current E-Class. It’s doubling down.
Two E-Classes, One Strategy
The brand’s new split lineup—previewed with the GLC EQ—means the electric E-Class will be sold alongside a heavily refreshed version of the existing sixth-gen model. Same badge. Similar styling. Completely different bones.
Why blur the lines? Simple: the EQE was too weird. Launched in 2022, it never resonated with traditional E-Class customers, who found it a little too moon-lander, not enough Stuttgart sedan. So Mercedes is scrapping the EQE nameplate and rebuilding the electric executive car to look, feel, and function like the E-Class people actually want.
Bigger Platform, Bigger Space
Underneath the crisp, conventional proportions is Mercedes’ new MB.EA platform, shared with the upcoming electric C-Class and GLC EQ. The architecture allows not just a longer wheelbase—internally described as “very status-oriented”—but better interior packaging than today’s car. Expect more legroom, more headroom, and fewer compromises in trunk space, courtesy of a skateboard-style battery layout.
Prototypes caught by spy photographers show a sedan that’s unmistakably E-Class, just sharpened: stretched stance, broad shoulders, and a grille that takes cues from both the GLC EQ and the Vision Iconic concept. It’s bold by Mercedes standards—designed to make sure future EVs stand apart from a sea of wind-tunnel clones.
Electric Comfort, Benchmark Quiet
Mercedes is already boasting that the electric E will deliver benchmark refinement, with noise isolation and ride comfort aimed squarely at beating the Audi A6 E-tron and BMW i5. If the current S-Class is anything to go by, don’t bet against Stuttgart here.
Tech Leap: 800 Volts and Level 3 Autonomy
Compared with the EQE’s 400V electrical system, the new car steps up to an 800-volt architecture, unlocking:
- 350 kW fast charging
- Improved efficiency
- Lower cooling demands
- Compatibility with Mercedes’ latest driver assistance suite
- Optional Level 3 hands-free driving (in markets that allow it)
CEO Ola Källenius calls the jump a “significant technological step”—and given the EQE’s relatively modest charging speeds, this one was overdue.

Powertrains and Range
Expect both single-motor RWD and dual-motor AWD configurations, mirroring the GLC EQ and next-gen C-Class EV. The battery lineup should also be shared, meaning the top-range variant will likely use the C-Class’s 94-kWh unit to deliver around 500 miles on the lenient European WLTP cycle.
Aerodynamics remain a priority. While early test mules wear open-spoke wheels, production models will switch to slicker, aero-optimized designs to push the drag coefficient toward the EQE’s slippery 0.22—even with the more traditional sedan shape.
One Body Style Only
Unlike the combustion E-Class, which will continue offering saloon and estate forms, the new electric model will launch as a sedan only. No wagon—at least not yet. (Yes, we’re disappointed too.)
2027: The Year of Two E-Classes
When it arrives, the electric E-Class won’t just replace the EQE—Mercedes plans to facelift the current E-Class heavily enough to visually align the pair. One platform for tradition. One for electrification. One badge to rule them both.
The strategy is bold, but logical: buyers still trust the E-Class name. And now, whether they want petrol or electrons, they won’t have to choose between familiarity and the future.
Source: Mercedes-Benz