An electric version of the Macan. — © Copyright AFP HECTOR RETAMAL/File
Many aspire to own, and some are fortunate enough to do so, luxury electric vehicles. Yet some of these vehicles, despite their price tags, cause problems for their owners. The money spent on comfortable seats or sophisticated climate control does not necessarily mean the core components are sufficiently reliable.
Leading the list of worst quality vehicles is the Porsche Macan Electric since owners need to check for fixes online 25 times more often than other EV drivers. At the other end of the scale, the most reliable luxury EVs come from German manufacturers, with Audi and BMW models both appearing in the worst 10.
The data was collated by eCarsTrade who examined owner concerns across 30 luxury electric vehicles sold in the US market. The study tracked how often owners search online for problems with their specific car model, using terms like “[model] problems,” “[model] recall,” and “[model] battery issues.” The numbers were adjusted for how many of each car actually sold last year, letting popular and rare models compete on equal terms.
The 10 most problemprone luxury EVs
| Model | Brand | 2024 US EV sales | Search Volume for Issues | Issue Searches per 10K Sales | Issues |
| Porsche Macan Electric | Porsche | 1,739.00 | 4,990.00 | 28,694.65 | Lowbeam headlamps calibrated too bright, which can dazzle oncoming drivers, plus early rearview camera visibility issues. |
| Jaguar IPace | Jaguar | 3,304.00 | 8,200.00 | 24,818.40 | Highvoltage battery overheating and thermalevent risk; campaigns involve pack inspection or replacement plus software updates to monitor and limit risk. |
| Tesla Model S | Tesla | 12,426.00 | 27,580.00 | 22,195.40 | Recalls for suspension, steering, displays and driver airbag modules; most fixes delivered via OTA software updates or component replacement. |
| Audi etron (original SUV) | Audi | 2,894.00 | 2,820.00 | 9,744.30 | Early recalls over HVbattery cooling and sealing that could lead to overheating, plus brakesystem and software campaigns. |
| Volvo XC40 Recharge | Volvo | 2,995.00 | 1,540.00 | 5,141.90 | Batterycontrol software and HVcontactor faults that can suddenly cut drive power, plus brakingsoftware glitches affecting Bmode/onepedal braking. |
| Porsche Taycan | Porsche | 4,747.00 | 1,230.00 | 2,591.11 | Highprofile campaigns for HVbattery and inverter issues that can cause power loss and, in some cases, overheating; some vehicles had packs inspected or replaced. |
| BMW iX | BMW | 15,383.00 | 2,520.00 | 1,638.17 | Same family of BMW HVsystem recalls as the i4, with possible sudden loss of drive power. |
| Volvo C40 Recharge | Volvo | 1,420.00 | 180.00 | 1,267.61 | Possible loss or reduction of brake function in Bmode / onepedal driving, especially downhill, plus earlier HVcontactor/powerloss issues. |
| BMW i4 | BMW | 23,403.00 | 2,700.00 | 1,153.70 | Highvoltage system software/contactors can shut down, causing sudden loss of drive power. |
| Lucid Air | Lucid | 10,241.00 | 950.00 | 927.64 | Recalls for frontsuspension hardware that can damage brake lines and a rearmotor wiring harness that can cut power; no largescale HVbattery pack recall to date. |
Looking at the top three:
Porsche Macan Electric
The key facts…
- 2024 US Sales: 1,739
- Issue Search Volume: 4,990 monthly
- Issue Searches per 10K Sales: 28,695
The Porsche Macan Electric causes owners the most problems among luxury EVs. Fewer than 2,000 of these cars were sold in America last year, but people search for their fixes 5,000 times every month. This means Macan owners are 25 times more likely to face issues than other EV drivers. The biggest complaints seem to be about headlights that shine too bright and rear camera problems that make it hard to see while backing up.
Jaguar IPace
The Jaguar IPace comes second among problemprone EVs. Jaguar sold about 3,304 of these units last year, but 8,200 people searched for solutions to the problems it came with. That’s roughly every owner looking up fixes more than 2 times each month. The main issue is battery overheating, which could lead to fires. Jaguar manufacturers had to inspect battery packs and update software to prevent these problems, replacing them with newer models after safety risks were found.
Tesla Model S
Tesla’s Model S takes third place. More than 12K Model S were sold last year, while over 27K people looked up the car’s issues monthly. This makes the model most problematic in raw numbers among all luxury EVs. Common complaints include suspension failures, steering problems, and faulty airbag modules. Tesla sends wireless updates or replaces parts to solve these, but the frequent lookups for fixes indicate frustration among owners.
Perhaps manufacturers have yet to pinpoint how to build EVs with the same reliability they’ve achieved in gaspowered luxury cars.
