Toyota bZ4X Review

£42,860 - £51,480

Electrifying.com score

7/10

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Toyota’s first-ever ground up pure electric car is competent and the 4x4 versions have genuine off-road ability. The real-world range is not great in winter though. 


  • Battery size: 64kWh
  • Max charge rate: 150kW
  • Range: 286-318 miles
  • Efficiency rating: B
  • Miles per kWh: 4.0-4.4

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  • Battery size: 64kWh
  • Max charge rate: 150kW
  • Range: 286-318 miles
  • Efficiency rating: B
  • Miles per kWh: 4.0-4.4
  • Toyota bZ4x action, front, red car, RHD UK registration
  • Toyota bZ4x action shot, rear, red car, RHD UK registration
  • Toyota bZ4x interior, RHD
  • Toyota bZ4x static shot, rear, red car, RHD UK registration
  • Toyota bZ4x charging shot, rear, red car, RHD UK registration
  • Toyota bZ4x boot shot, red car, RHD UK registration

Ginny Says

“Toyota’s first proper pure electric car brings expertise gained from years of partial electrification. Look out for the decent finance deals and it could make sense.”

Tom Says

“I ran a bZ4X for three months and grew to respect it rather than love it. Owners tell me the recent software updates make a real difference to the real-world range too. ”

Driven and reviewed by 

Tom Ford

 - 
24 Jan 2024


There’s one thing about this Toyota which immediately sparks conversation. It’s not the range, the styling or the charging speed. It’s the name. Perhaps this is a well-planned move by Toyota, after all there are drivers who have owned a Nissan Qashqai for a decade and still can’t spell it.

It may look like the kind of name that appeared after a cat walked across a computer keyboard, but the Toyota bZ4X is Toyota’s very first pure electric car. And there’s plenty to like from the off. 


Toyota bZ4x action, front, red car, RHD UK registration

Look beyond the name though and it’s a big deal. Why? Because its Toyota’s first attempt at a bespoke pure electric car. 

Let’s look at the basics first. It’s a five-seat, pure electric SUV that goes up against the myriad of other electric five-seat SUVs that every other manufacturer is currently pumping out.

To make it stand out it has some pretty bold looks, full of angles and sharp bits which will polarise opinion. But that’s good in a world of blandness.

There’s a water-cooled 71.4kWh battery (64kWh usable) built into the structure under the floor for added rigidity, and it comes with either one motor driving the front wheels with 201bhp and 317 miles of range - depending on the spec - or an all-wheel drive version with two 107bhp motors at either end. That one has 215bhp and a possible 286 miles of range. They’re excellent figures - especially with the single-motor version breaking the magic 300 mile barrier with 4.4miles per kWh efficiency. That’s properly competitive. The problem currently is that owners aren't getting near those figures in the real world, but there are changes in the pipeline to fix it. 

Early cars only had 6.6kW AC charging, but cars produced from later in 2022 have 11kW. And all cars get 150kW DC charging from a more common CCS2 plug - no CHAdeMO charger here, unlike the Lexus UX300e - so you’re looking at half an hour from 10-80% on a powerful enough public charger, and about nine and a half hours on a home wallbox. That’s at the upper end of what we expect for this kind of car, so all good.

Quality is also good - there’s a range of recycled and sustainable materials, and while there are one or two cheaper bits, it feels very nicely put together. It's not inspirational or interesting, but it works. There’s storage here and here, and the place where you put your phone has a transparent lid, so you can see if you’ve got a message. Which you then have to resist looking at until you’ve stopped.

As for when you’re on the move, well, it’s all very calm and competent. Toyota seems to have gone for that vibe rather than neck-snapping acceleration. Both models are perfectly capable of zooming about, but they suit cruising better.

The steering is a bit fake-feeling but it does the job, and the car has a handily tight turning circle. And although the bZ4x does feel a bit heavy at times, it gets around corners without fuss. In fact, that’s a good way to describe the way this car drives overall - it’s really competent without being overly emotional. Even the brake re-gen is good but not super-aggressive.

But it does have a couple of tricks up its electronic sleeves. Because this car was developed in conjunction with Subaru, the all-wheel drive bZ4X has a set of off-road programmes that lets it cope in mud, snow or whatever you can throw at it. 

Now, it’s never going to be a Land Rover Defender, it certainly makes the car a solid companion when things get sticky. Need to get up a tricky track in winter? This Toyota will be the best electric car for it. And it tows up to 750kg, and can wade decent-sized puddles too.

But the big news from Toyota here has a lot to do with the backup you get with a bZ4X. Toyota is pushing the ‘one-stop-shop’ subscription model, and for fuss-free ownership. Initial leasing figures seem to suggest that the bZ4X will probably end up in the same hard-fought arena as all the decent electric SUVs - so £600-ish a month. Although Toyota’s big battery warranty and ‘Toyota Relax’ servicing-activated extended warranties offer a truckload of peace of mind. Try 10 years on the battery and a million kilometres (with 3year/60k on the rest of the car) if you get it checked at a dealer regularly. 

Toyota’s first ever go at a pure electric car is not a game-changer, but there’s a lot of ability and subtle appeal in the bZ4X that takes care of the little hassles of running an electric car. It’s clever, competent and useful, and it should be on your ‘must try’ list if you’re in the market for this kind of car. Although the name is still a bit stupid. 

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