Asking the impossible - tall but narrow?
Discussion
We have an Ioniq 5 and are generally quite pleased. Eyeing up options for what comes next and my wife would like something that has a raised seating position, but which isn’t too big (we had a loan of an iX and it was a bit too wide and a bit too long). Are there any EV options out there? My wife was a fan of a mid-2000s RAV4…
You don’t say what range you want or how narrow but there’s loads of Small EV SUVs around
Peugeot 2008, Vauxhall Mokka, BMW iX1, Q4 isn’t massive , Skodas new elrouq, Kia EV3, fiat grande panda, Honda ENq1, Lexus UBX, Mercedes EQA, ford Puma E - or even the explorer isn’t massive (id4 sized)
Peugeot 2008, Vauxhall Mokka, BMW iX1, Q4 isn’t massive , Skodas new elrouq, Kia EV3, fiat grande panda, Honda ENq1, Lexus UBX, Mercedes EQA, ford Puma E - or even the explorer isn’t massive (id4 sized)
hidetheelephants said:
Try a Soul or an EV3, they're about the same size as the Rav4 and the softroaderish design means you're a bit higher than the average hatchback.
This. My wife finds my GV60 a bit “broad” (same platform as Ioniq 5), but loves her Soul. It has the height (and squared off bonnet with easy to see corners) but much easier to thread between parked cars etc. plfrench said:
Agree with someone else above about Skoda’s new Elroq. Looks pretty bang on in terms of dimensions apart from having a significantly larger boot.

Building on the above, the OP is looking at C segment SUV’s. Skoda Elroq, Renault Scenic. Kia EV3 is a bit smaller. All these recently got 5 star ratings on a Whatcar group test, and are apparently are best of breed right now.The Ioniq 5 is D segment and significantly larger.
Edited by wyson on Sunday 9th February 18:22
Each new generation of car seems to get wider, especially EV's.
It does kinda make sense as the extra width is useful in terms of practicality and space 100% of the time, and only occasionally a problem when parking which is less than 1% of the time.
And many newer cars all park themselves with a high level of accuracy anyway.
Width seems an odd deciding factor for for car choice! I say that as someone who lives in a thousand year old market town, so I do understand that sometimes smaller is better...
It does kinda make sense as the extra width is useful in terms of practicality and space 100% of the time, and only occasionally a problem when parking which is less than 1% of the time.
And many newer cars all park themselves with a high level of accuracy anyway.
Width seems an odd deciding factor for for car choice! I say that as someone who lives in a thousand year old market town, so I do understand that sometimes smaller is better...
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