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2022 Lexus UX price and features: New UX300e electric SUV sets sights on Mercedes-Benz EQA and Volvo XC40 Recharge Pure Electric

The UX300e has become Lexus Australia’s first all-electric model.

Lexus Australia has confirmed pricing and specification details – plus longer warranties – for its first all-electric model, the UX300e small SUV, which enters local showrooms this month.

Based on the internal-combustion UX, the UX300e is available in two grades, with the entry-level Luxury comprehensively equipped, while the flagship Sports Luxury manages to go a step further.

With the Luxury and Sports Luxury priced from $74,000 and $81,000 plus on-road costs respectively, the UX300e rivals the Mercedes-Benz EQA (from $76,800) and Volvo XC40 Recharge Pure Electric (from $76,990).

As reported, the UX300e has a single 150kW/300Nm electric motor that drives the front wheels to knock off the zero-to-100km/h sprint in 7.5 seconds. More importantly, though, its 54.3kWh lithium-ion battery provides 305km of WLTP-certified range.

A 7kW AC charger with a Type 2 plug can fully charge the UX300e’s in 6.5 hours. Conveniently, Lexus Australia will organise Jet Charge to install such a wallbox at the home of every buyer and give them two cables as part of the purchase price.

Meanwhile, a 50kW DC fast charger with a CHAdeMO plug can fully charge the UX300e’s battery in 80 minutes, with Lexus Australia also throwing in a three-year subscription to the largest public EV charging network in Australia, Chargefox.

But if buyers need to travel long distances and don’t want to regularly stop to charge, Lexus Australia offers petrol- or hybrid-powered loan cars for four trips up to eight days in duration over the first three years of ownership.

Standard equipment in the Luxury otherwise includes three drive modes (Eco, Normal and Sport), grille shutters, LED lights, 17-inch alloy wheels, four regenerative braking modes, power-folding side mirrors with heating, roof rails, keyless entry, rear privacy glass and a hands-free power tailgate.

Inside, push-button start, a 10.3-inch multimedia systemsatellite navigationApple CarPlay and Android Auto support, digital radio, a 13-speaker Mark Levinson sound system, a 7.0-inch multifunction display and wireless smartphone charging feature.

Then there’s a heated steering wheel (with paddle-shifters), a power-adjustable steering column, eight-way power-adjustable front seats (with heating and cooling), heated rear outboard seats, an auto-dimming rearview mirror and alloy scuff plates.

Advanced driver-assist systems extend to front and rear autonomous emergency braking (with pedestrian and daytime cyclist detection), steering and lane-keep assist, adaptive cruise control, road sign recognition, high-beam assist, active blind-spot monitoring, rear cross-traffic alert, tyre pressure monitoring, a reversing camera and front and rear parking sensors.

The Sports Luxury adds adaptive tri-beam LED headlights, 18-inch alloy wheels, a moonroof, a head-up display, ‘smooth’ leather-accented upholstery (black, Rich Cream, White Ash, Ochre or Zephyr Blue), a stitched Washi instrument panel (black, brown or Cobalt Blue), 3D illuminated trim and surround-view cameras.

The UX300e is the first Lexus Australia model to come with a five-year/unlimited-km warranty, with its battery is covered by a separate 10-year/unlimited-km term. Five years of roadside assistance is also included.

The UX300e’s service intervals are every 12 months or 15,000km, whichever comes first, with capped-price servicing available for the first five visits, cost $1475 in total.

2022 Lexus UX300e pricing before on-road costs

VariantTransmissionCost
Luxuryautomatic$74,000
Sports Luxuryautomatic$81,000

UPDATED FROM: 05/10/2021

Justin Hilliard
Head of Editorial
Justin’s dad chose to miss his birth because he wanted to watch Peter Brock hopefully win Bathurst, so it figures Justin grew up to have a car obsession, too – and don’t worry, his dad did turn up in time after some stern words from his mum. That said, despite loving cars and writing, Justin chose to pursue career paths that didn’t lend themselves to automotive journalism, before eventually ending up working as a computer technician. But that car itch just couldn’t be scratched by his chipped Volkswagen Golf R (Mk7), so he finally decided to give into the inevitable and study a Master of Journalism at the same time. And even with the long odds, Justin was lucky enough to land a full-time job as a motoring journalist soon after graduating and the rest, as they say, is history. These days, Justin happily finds himself working at CarsGuide during the biggest period of change yet for the automotive industry, which is perhaps the most exciting part of all. In case you’re wondering, Justin begrudgingly sold the Golf R (sans chip) and still has plans to buy his dream car, an E46 BMW M3 coupe (manual, of course), but he is in desperate need of a second car space – or maybe a third.
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