The Porsche Taycan Turbo's Range Is Only 201 Miles According To The EPA
Ever since the Porsche Taycan was teased as the Mission E concept way back in 2015, it’s been hailed as the electric car to really take on Tesla.
Central to that is the amount of range that the Porsche offers on a full charge. 300 miles or so is the ballpark, and that exact figure was what Porsche affirmed when the Mission E was launched. But, in the US EPA emissions test at least, the Taycan Turbo didn’t get anywhere near that figure.
In fact, the EPA test said its range was just 201 miles. Porsche was obviously shocked by this, as it conducted its own tests to prove that, in the right conditions, you could get much closer to the 300-mile range first promised. The Taycan’s US result looks even worse when you consider it has a shorter EPA range than the Nissan Leaf, Chevrolet Bolt, Jaguar I-Pace and all iterations of Tesla’s three models – and it has a larger pricetag than all of those cars.
Porsche went to AMCI Testing, a California company that’s independent and ‘committed to unbiased, comparative evaluations of automotive products’. It found that owners would, on average, be able to travel 275 miles between charges, with an estimated city-only range of 288 miles. That’s a lot closer to the 300-mile promise, and almost the same as the Taycan Turbo’s 279-mile WLTP range in Europe.
But, if you’re buying a Taycan in America, it’ll say a range of 201 miles on the car’s documents.
So why are the emissions tests different? How come there are 79 miles of range separating the EPA and WLTP results? Well, it’s to do with the types of driving the tests are based on; WLTP focuses more on suburban driving, as that’s what Europeans are more likely to do, while EPA includes more highway driving at faster speeds. The EPA test is thought to be stricter overall, too.
Still, we expect Porsche to roll out updates during the car’s lifespan to improve its 201-mile EPA range claim.
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