The National Times - Mercedes new electric VLE: Price and performance?

Mercedes new electric VLE: Price and performance?


Mercedes new electric VLE: Price and performance?
Mercedes new electric VLE: Price and performance?

Mercedes is not simply pushing the V-Class into the electric age; it is changing the vehicle’s very character. With the VLE, the familiar people carrier becomes something much closer to a rolling grand limousine. That is the real message behind this reboot. In the future, Mercedes will draw a clearer line between the VLE, positioned roughly on E-Class territory, and the even more luxurious VLS at the top end. This restart is therefore aimed not only at European families or hotel shuttles, but at a global market in which large luxury vans have long since become status objects.

The technical leap is just as significant. The VLE is the first model to sit on a dedicated electric van architecture and it brings precisely the ingredients Mercedes wants to associate with its upper-class passenger cars: 800-volt technology, very fast charging, air suspension, rear-axle steering, a much more digital cockpit and an interior that feels more like a lounge than a traditional van. Up to eight seats, a highly flexible rear compartment, generous luggage space and strong towing credentials are all meant to prove that this is not merely a beautifully staged product, but a genuinely usable one. Mercedes wants to dissolve the old compromise: the VLE is supposed to be a business shuttle, a family car, a travel vehicle and a prestige product all at once.

That inevitably puts range at the centre of the debate. On paper, the package is convincing: a large battery, a modern EV-first platform, strong aerodynamics, rapid charging and a clear attempt to present long-distance usability as something tangible rather than theoretical. All of that supports the idea that the official WLTP claim is not just marketing theatre. Even so, it would be a mistake to read that figure as an everyday guarantee. A vehicle of this size already weighs roughly three tonnes before passengers or luggage are added, and the heavier versions push total weight significantly higher still. Add several occupants, baggage, winter temperatures, climate control, large wheels and brisk motorway speeds, and the usable range will naturally fall. The VLE does not defeat physics; it simply shows how far current engineering can reduce the traditional drawbacks of large electric vehicles.

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The price debate is even sharper. This is the point where brand ambition and buyer expectations collide head-on. Depending on version and equipment, the VLE currently enters the market from just under 80,000 euros to around 88,000 euros, while heavily specified versions move well beyond 100,000 euros and can climb considerably higher. That places the VLE far away from the pricing logic of the traditional V-Class and also beyond the previous EQV. Anyone viewing it primarily as a family van will see that threshold as very high. Anyone assessing it as an electric chauffeur shuttle or luxury representative vehicle will more quickly understand why Mercedes is no longer benchmarking it against vans, but against large premium sedans and exclusive people movers.

That same tension is reflected in many public online discussions. The dominant reaction is not a rejection of the technology itself, but scepticism about the target audience. Many voices argue that Mercedes is emotionally distancing the van from its traditional buyers and styling it more for prestige and chauffeur markets than for everyday European users. The main criticisms concern the high price, the heavy luxury staging and the fear that a fundamentally practical vehicle may lose its grounding. At the same time, there is genuine approval as well. The most common positive argument is that Mercedes is not merely electrifying an existing combustion van this time, but rethinking an electric vehicle from the ground up, with better aerodynamics, higher comfort and much faster charging.

In the end, the new electric van is neither a gimmick nor a bargain. Its range deserves to be taken seriously as real technical progress, but it remains a standardised value that will shrink noticeably in everyday use depending on conditions. The price is partly justified if the VLE is judged as a high-end, technology-heavy flagship with a clear premium and shuttle orientation. It becomes much harder to justify if one still has the earlier V-Class in mind as a comparatively grounded space carrier with a Mercedes badge. Mercedes is therefore not simply launching an electric V-Class. It is launching an electric statement vehicle – and that distinction will decide whether the VLE is seen as visionary or simply too expensive.

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Audi Q9 – how likely is it to become a reality?

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Dacia Striker: Stylish and sturdy?

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Skoda Peaq: New all-electric seven-seater

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Rip-offs at the petrol pump?

Fuel prices in Germany have become a political flashpoint. Since war broke out in Iran and the Strait of Hormuz was temporarily closed, global oil prices have surged. Crude oil quotations rose by around 20 percent to 84 dollars a barrel, and the wholesale price of diesel in Rotterdam climbed by 26 cents per litre – almost 50 percent. As a result, German motorists were paying an average of Euro 2.156 per litre for diesel and Euro 2.037 for Super E10 in mid‑March 2026.Petrol‑station leaseholders emphasise that they do not set their own pump prices. The industry’s lobbying group accuses the oil majors of selling fuel they bought cheaply at a huge mark‑up – behaviour described as “predatory capitalism”. Leaseholders receive none of the extra margin yet face the anger of customers. Convenience‑store sales are also collapsing because angry motorists buy nothing after filling up.Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s government has responded with a package of measures. Filling stations may raise prices only once a day at noon; price cuts are allowed at any time. Part of the national oil reserve will be released, and the competition authority will get more powers. Critics say this does not go far enough. The social welfare organisation SoVD warns that without a price cap consumers remain at the mercy of suppliers and calls for targeted relief for low‑ and middle‑income households. SPD politicians demand a price cap to ensure that consumers are not “fleeced”, while economy minister Katherina Reiche rejects the idea of a state‑financed fuel subsidy.

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