Home » Holy Crap, Mercedes-Benz Is Actually Bringing This New Luxury Minivan To America

Holy Crap, Mercedes-Benz Is Actually Bringing This New Luxury Minivan To America

Mercedes Benz Van Ts

For years now, Americans have watched as buyers in Europe, the Middle East, and Asia have enjoyed a growing market of minivans from luxury carmakers. As it turns out, the extra space and ease of access make vans the perfect vehicle type for high-end limousine work, leading to an entirely new segment overseas where manufacturers sell vans not as family shuttles or cargo haulers, but fancy, living-room-like opulence on wheels.

Well-appointed vans, not sedans like the BMW 7-Series or Mercedes-Benz S-Class, are the norm for luxury ground transport in places like Japan, South Korea, and China. Toyota, Lexus, Hyundai, Kia, and a host of Chinese brands have vans with available luxury appointments for the second row, where you feel more like you’re sitting in a first-class airline seat than a regular car.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Mercedes makes something like that, too. Called the V-Class, it’s a van that it sells in most major markets, but not in North America. Last year, it showed off a concept called the Vision V, which previewed a new all-electric minivan meant to join the V-Class fold. Now, that van is finally here. And it’s actually coming to America.

Real Luxury, In Van Form

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In America, Mercedes already has a quasi-foothold on the luxury van market thanks to its line of commercial-sized Sprinter vans. Third-party outfitters regularly upgrade Sprinters to turn them into gigantic limousines, with flat screen televisions, lounge chairs, and high-end quilted leather. The downside with Sprinters is that they’re pretty large and truck-like in their design, meaning the ride can never be as comfortable as something like an S-Class.

Der Neue Vollelektrische Mercedes Benz Vle Die Angaben Sind Vorläufig Und Wurden Intern Nach Maßgabe Der Zertifizierungsmethode „wltp Prüfverfahren“ Ermittelt. Es Liegen Bislang Weder Eine Eg Typgenehmigung Noch Eine Konformitätsbescheinigung Mi
Source: Mercedes-Benz

Enter the Mercedes-Benz VLE. It’s an all-electric, passenger-size minivan that Mercedes itself describes as a “grand limousine.” It all starts on the outside, where the VLE adopts the fascia first shown on the Vision V concept last year. There’s a giant faux grille up front, with headlights that contain Mercedes tri-star design cues inside. The lights are connected by a central beam that runs across the top of the bumper. Is it beautiful? No, not really. The huge mouth and angry eyes sort of remind me of the aliens from that Tom Cruise sci-fi movie Edge of Tomorrow. But at least it’s not boring. In 2026, with safety regs and aerodynamic requirements the way they are, that’s the most you can hope for. If it’s any consolation, the coefficient of drag is just 0.25, which is pretty amazing for a van.

Der Neue Vollelektrische Mercedes Benz Vle Die Angaben Sind Vorläufig Und Wurden Intern Nach Maßgabe Der Zertifizierungsmethode „wltp Prüfverfahren“ Ermittelt. Es Liegen Bislang Weder Eine Eg Typgenehmigung Noch Eine Konformitätsbescheinigung Mit
Source: Mercedes-Benz

The side of the VLE looks like most other minivans, which is to be expected. The recessed door handles are typical for Mercedes EVs, and I enjoy the lattice-shaped wheels. But things get really interesting at the back, where the roof and most of the sides are outlined with exterior lighting. Each taillight alone looks like it could be three feet tall, but somehow, it all works. I’d advise against backing into a wall and damaging one of those lights, because I’m sure it won’t be cheap to replace.

Der Neue Vollelektrische Mercedes Benz Vle Die Angaben Sind Vorläufig Und Wurden Intern Nach Maßgabe Der Zertifizierungsmethode „wltp Prüfverfahren“ Ermittelt. Es Liegen Bislang Weder Eine Eg Typgenehmigung Noch Eine Konformitätsbescheinigung Mit
Source: Mercedes-Benz

The truly important stuff happens inside the VLE. There are three different rear seat setups available, from an eight-seater setup with two three-seat benches, to a six-seater setup with four individual chairs, to a “Grand Comfort Seat” setup, which gives the second row seats with wireless charging, lumbar support, calf support, an additional pillow, fold-out tables, and a massage function.

If you option the manually operated seats, they’ll come with a feature Mercedes calls Roll & Go. While it’s not as convenient as Chrysler’s Stow ‘n Go (nothing ever is), it still seems pretty useful if you need to adjust space inside often. From the release:

Customers can move and fold the seats and benches forward and backward with minimal effort, then lock them in place in any position. They are also removable in any position, enabling customers to quickly and easily create a cargo space to suit their specific requirements. When removed, the seats can easily be rolled into the garage on their integrated four wheels.

Der Neue Vollelektrische Mercedes Benz Vle Die Angaben Sind Vorläufig Und Wurden Intern Nach Maßgabe Der Zertifizierungsmethode „wltp Prüfverfahren“ Ermittelt. Es Liegen Bislang Weder Eine Eg Typgenehmigung Noch Eine Konformitätsbescheinigung Mit
Source: Mercedes-Benz

But the main attraction inside is a massive, 31.3-inch, 8K-resolution, panoramic screen that drops down from the headliner for the second row, similar to the optional Theater Screen found in the BMW 7-Series. You can do stuff like watch movies or TV shows, or play video games. There’s also a front-facing 8-megapixel camera in the screen, so you can take video conference calls while on the move, because if you’re in this car, you’re a big, important businessperson who can’t spare even one minute being shuttled from one meeting to another.

It’s Electric, And I’m Not Sure That’s A Good Thing

Electric car sales aren’t exactly booming right now, but Mercedes still thinks it has a business case for the VLE in the United States. Under the floor sits a big-boy 115-kWh battery pack, paired to 800-volt tech for ultra-fast charging. It feeds energy to two electric motors for standard all-wheel drive, with a combined maximum power of 409 horsepower. Not too shabby for a minivan.

Der Neue Vollelektrische Mercedes Benz Vle Die Angaben Sind Vorläufig Und Wurden Intern Nach Maßgabe Der Zertifizierungsmethode „wltp Prüfverfahren“ Ermittelt. Es Liegen Bislang Weder Eine Eg Typgenehmigung Noch Eine Konformitätsbescheinigung Mit
Source: Mercedes-Benz

Air suspension and four-wheel steering are standard, which means the VLE should be both comfortable and pretty agile (for how heavy it weighs, anyway). Mercedes hasn’t released a curb weight estimate, though for a vehicle as big and well-equipped as this, I have to imagine it will weigh at least three tons (again, that’s just a guess).

As for range, Mercedes estimates that large battery pack is good for over 700 kilometers (434 miles) on the WLTP test cycle, which is the standard for Europe. These estimates are always a bit optimistic compared to America’s EPA cycle and real-world tests; actual range is probably going to be closer to 350 miles, which is still pretty good for considering the VLE’s size.

Der Neue Vollelektrische Mercedes Benz Vle Die Angaben Sind Vorläufig Und Wurden Intern Nach Maßgabe Der Zertifizierungsmethode „wltp Prüfverfahren“ Ermittelt. Es Liegen Bislang Weder Eine Eg Typgenehmigung Noch Eine Konformitätsbescheinigung Mit
Source: Mercedes-Benz

The VLE is the most interesting Mercedes to make it Stateside in years, but I’m not sure there’s a real market for it. While I do think there’s room for the luxury van segment to grow in the U.S., making this van electric-only immediately shrinks its buyer base by a considerable margin. One look at the sales of Volkswagen’s ID.Buzz, the only other electric van for sale in our market, will tell you that. The VLE is three or four niches combined into one car, so it’s hard to see how it’ll be anything more than a low-volume special. Still, having a minivan from a luxury German automaker for sale in America is pretty damn cool. So I’m happy.

Top graphic image: Mercedes-Benz

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Joe L
Member
Joe L
25 minutes ago

I look forward to riding around SoCal in these during those wacky times when an Uber/Lyft Black is a better deal. Gotta love that Chase Sapphire Reserve Lyft Pink perk.

HowDoYouCrash
Member
HowDoYouCrash
25 minutes ago

This has to be for California and NYC limo/for-hire businesses? Right?!

Like I can totally see the use case in somewhere like New York where EVs get special TLC treatment (requirement?) and luxury is a requirement by the customers. Having four person conference room/private jet like seating should easily beat out the black Escalades that currently dominate the market.

There’s no real reason a regular person should buy this. But in our K-shaped world I understand how there is totally a 500-1000 unit per year market for these as company vehicles.

EXL500
Member
EXL500
25 minutes ago

It looks like a rodent.

Michael Han
Member
Michael Han
28 minutes ago

Manifesting the Alphard in the US as a Lexus

Theotherotter
Member
Theotherotter
33 minutes ago

It looks a little short for the US market. Another six or eight inches of length and you could give both the second and third rows expansive legroom.

Rick Garcia
Member
Rick Garcia
49 minutes ago

I am the market for this, potentially. I really want an EV van to replace my Odyssey. We have a cabin in the Sierras at 5,300ft elevation. EV power would make the drive so much nicer. Taking out Ioniq 5 over the Santa Cruz mountains is such a easier and nicer drive with EV power and one pedal driving. I want that going to my cabin. The VW is a tech nightmare with crap range, so I won’t work.

But, it better have removable seats and be able hold a 4×8 sheet of plywood. I turn my Odyssey in a cargo van several times a year and if the Merc can’t do that, it’s no good for me.

AllCattleNoHat
AllCattleNoHat
51 minutes ago

Mercedes meets VW in a bar.

VW: “Hey, Mercedes, have you seen our new minivan in the USA, the I.D. Bust?

Mercedes: “Hold my beer…”

Younork
Younork
58 minutes ago

I suspect this won’t sell very well, but for the few people who buy it, it’ll be the greatest thing ever. Minivans do two things really well: local kid runabout duty, and road trip duty. An EV minivan just moves the needle more towards local runabout duty, which I suspect is where a majority of minivan miles are anyway. It remains to be seen whether the upper class finds this appealing, but this might be the greatest vehicle for LA traffic ever.

Last edited 57 minutes ago by Younork
M SV
M SV
1 hour ago

I guess good but I don’t see it selling well. Maybe they can get a deal with ride share. Sell some that way. I get mini vans are set for a resurgence. This seems very much designed with the Asian market in mind. The Zeekr and xpeng vans are weird and cheap enough they could probably do something. People already getting excited over the Zeekr waymos. Maybe if this comes in cheaper then a converted sprinter then you have a market but still not sure it’s enough to justify. With the model x discounted that does leave a gap in the luxury ride share bev maybe this can fill it. Or they will just go to the various other bev suv. But the gv90 might be better suited towards that.

JDE
JDE
1 hour ago

My question is why do we not get the Toyota Hiace in the states? Seems like Toyota could probably do well in the big transport game with Ford, Ram and Mercedes in that game currently.

Nsane In The MembraNe
Member
Nsane In The MembraNe
1 hour ago

Came here expecting to see the “VANS ARE ALWAYS THE ANSWER IF YOU DON’T CHOOSE A VAN AS A FAMILY CAR YOU’RE A VILE PIECE OF SHIT AND PART OF THE PROBLEM” crowd finding something to complain about. I was not disappointed. And of course a company takes a risk, makes something enthusiasts have been loudly screaming for for years, and enthusiasts are loudly proclaiming that they’d never buy such a thing.

It’ll be canceled within a few years and we’ll inevitably have articles on car blogs in a decade about how this was ahead of its time, along with a sea of comments about how we never knew good we had it and should’ve bought them while we could’ve.

And then in 20 years some nostalgic Gen Alpha kid who got rich in the Water Wars is going to buy one for $200,000 on Bring A Trailer. Time is a flat circle. Also Jesus Christ with the EV complaints. When has the engine ever been the main draw of minivan? And yes, I know…AN ODYSSEY TOTALLY HAS VTEC BRO!

My lawn. Get off of it.

Dan G.
Member
Dan G.
2 hours ago

At first glance, VLE resembles vile. Not a good first impression.

Drive By Commenter
Member
Drive By Commenter
2 hours ago

Electric is absolutely the move for this. It’s practically silent with zero shifts naturally. Plus it’ll be cheaper to operate than a gas vehicle. Not like the target market cares but their chauffeur not smelling like gas is a bonus. Or no whiffs of exhaust eddying around the vehicle when the wind is right.

JDE
JDE
1 hour ago

Except that does not seem to be regulated very well. Fast charge stations seem to have prices per KW all over the board, and sometimes based on what car it is charging. Often times the current price of a gallon of gas nets you more miles per $ than a fast charge does.

Dottie
Member
Dottie
2 hours ago

Questionable decision to go with an EV but I welcome more MPVs like this as a supplement to the rolling monolith of compromise that is a luxury crossover, especially since it’s not pretending to be an off roader 🙂

Joey Smith
Joey Smith
2 hours ago

I am the market for this. As far as why electric? EVs are the future. Renewable energy is cheaper to build than fossil fuel electric plants now. Why not take advantage of it.

Besides, SUVs are played out.

JDE
JDE
1 hour ago
Reply to  Joey Smith

yeah, but the cost to get into them is still too high, and the infrastructure to fast charge on the go is still piss poor.

Joey Smith
Joey Smith
29 minutes ago
Reply to  JDE

The cost of this luxury van is probably going to be too high, yes. But EVs in general are not too expensive. You can buy a brand new Bolt with 150kw DC fast charging and over 250 miles of range for less than $30k. If you buy used, EVs have some of the best deals on the market right now, by far.

The fast charging infrastructure has improved massively in recent years, and will continue to improve. I don’t think we can say the number of gas stations has gone up 10x from 2016 to 2026, but we’re in that ball park for fast chargers.

Not to mention people vastly overestimate the amount they road trip. I consider myself an outdoorsy guy and I’ve done like 4 trips in the past 3 years where I’ve gone over 200 miles in one direction in one day. Almost all of everyone’s charging can be done at home, and in the US, most people who own a car are able to charge at home.

Mithun
Member
Mithun
1 hour ago
Reply to  Joey Smith

Yea, we’re expecting kiddo #2 in a few months and have dogs. Absolutely loved the ID.Buzz but was on the fence given the genuinely abysmal range; sad but not surprised to see it got canned. If this has a real world range starting with a 3xx, this might be our next family vehicle. My only worry would be the crushing depreciation luxury EVs experience…

Joey Smith
Joey Smith
34 minutes ago
Reply to  Mithun

That’s an issue, but that’s why I think the move is to buy it used once someone with way too much money is done with a lease.

Highland Green Miata
Member
Highland Green Miata
2 hours ago

Yay! A Benz minivan! It’s….electric. Oh. Buzz kill.

Dogisbadob
Dogisbadob
2 hours ago

Finally!

Just too bad MB didn’t sell the nicer Vianos over here. They limited the options you could get on passenger versions of the Metris 🙁

I think people are willing to pay more for a Mercedes than a VW. Also, MB has that CKD facility in SC, where they did that with the Metris and Sprinter (though the passenger vans were imported from Germany in complete assembled form). That means they can sell a cargo van much cheaper than VW ever could with the Buzz.

Timbales
Timbales
2 hours ago

There are so many unattractive elements to this van, but the seats look really comfy.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
2 hours ago

Pardon my ignorance, isn’t this the Vito?
(or, rather, e-Vito)

Live2ski
Member
Live2ski
2 hours ago

These are not for the average soccer mom or doing roadtrips. EV make perfect sense for this use especially with 800v for fast charging. These are meant for Limo companies, Black car service and RideShare. Moving people around town in comfort. They will still be a niche product, but I’m sure there will be clusters in LA, Las Vegas, Miami and NYC

Spopepro
Member
Spopepro
2 hours ago
Reply to  Live2ski

Yeah, these will replace the black tahoes and everyone will be very happy.

Hangover Grenade
Hangover Grenade
2 hours ago

They looked at the sales disaster that was the ID.Buzz and said, “Hold my beer!”

TroubledTroubadour
TroubledTroubadour
2 hours ago

I’d honestly be super interested in this if it was a hybrid but I doubt I could have afforded it either way.

V10omous
Member
V10omous
2 hours ago

Insane fumble making this an EV only.

I’d be interested in a gas only version, or even a hybrid, but zero chance of an EV until range numbers get real.

G. K.
G. K.
2 hours ago

Too bad it’s styled so poorly though.

I don’t understand the attempt to revive the W108/109-style grille, which looks great but isn’t at all appropriate on a modern car. And whichever Swabian stylist has decided that all the cars’ headlights should invoke the three-pointed star was smoking something other than Saitenwürstle.

Oh, and–as you said–the fact that it’s EV-only really limits its appeal, especially to the sorts of people who like long-range vehicles. Meanwhile, my BIL and SIL got a 2025 Sienna Woodland Edition, and it got an honest 600 miles on an 18-gallon tank, fully-laden. What we really need is for Toyota to take the Sienna’s dead-simple, reliable hybrid system and put that in a Lexus minivan, and I mean something other than the garishly styled Alphard-based LM. Mercedes-Benz, if they got their act together, could do something similar. And it wouldn’t even have to be a diesel.

Bob the Hobo
Bob the Hobo
2 hours ago

They’re bringing back the third gen Chrysler van Easy Out Roller Seats?
And here I thought they were eager to forget the Daimler-Chrysler era…

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