2023 Hyundai Ioniq 6 Official EPA Range Revealed: Up to 361 Miles

2023 Hyundai Ioniq 6 Official EPA Range Revealed: Up to 361 Miles

2023 Hyundai Ioniq 6 EPA range numbers are out, and they’re better than the company’s earlier estimates.The best-performing version manages 361 miles on a charge, while the shortest-range variant is still good for 270 miles.All range figures are with a 77.4-kWh battery pack. A smaller pack (with less range) will join the lineup sometime after launch.

From the time Hyundai first unveiled the Ioniq 6 sedan, it boasted that the slippery sedan would offer the most range of its siblings on the E-GMP platform. Now, official EPA estimates are out, and the results verify those claims.

The 225-hp single-motor, rear-wheel-drive Ioniq 6 SE (with 18-inch wheels) sees a headline-making range estimate of 361 miles. The 320-hp dual-motor, all-wheel-drive SE is good for 316 miles.

The SEL and Limited trim levels (with 20-inch wheels) have somewhat lower range figures of 305 miles for the single-motor, RWD variant and 270 miles with dual motors and AWD.

These range figures are for the 77.4-kWh battery pack, which will be the only one available when the Ioniq 6 goes on sale this spring. A smaller, 53.0-kWh unit (with a commensurately shorter range) will join the lineup at some point later in the model year.

With the same powertrain and battery pack, the Ioniq 6 goes farther than its EV siblings, the Ioniq 5, the Kia EV6, and the Genesis GV60. Credit in part goes to the banana-shaped sedan’s slippery aerodynamic profile, which gives it a claimed coefficient of drag of just 0.22 (foreign-market versions with side-view cameras instead of mirrors are 0.21).

Asked about the large range difference between the Ioniq 6 models with 20-inch wheels versus those rolling on 18s, Hyundai says that the smaller wheels are also narrower and wear narrower, lower-rolling-resistance tires. The SE model also has less equipment than the SEL and Limited, making it slightly lighter.

See also  BMW XM SUV shows up in patent images in Japan

Like the other cars on the E-GMP platform, the Ioniq 6 will offer both 400- and 800-volt charging. Hooked up to a 350-kW charger, the Ioniq 6 battery can be replenished from 10 to 80 percent in less than 20 minutes, according to Hyundai. The car will also offer V2L (vehicle-to-load) capability to power outside accessories, using an available adaptor.

The Ioniq 6 goes on sale this Spring. Pricing has not been announced, but we estimate it will come in under $50,000.