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.
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

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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









I would genuinely be the target audience for this if it weren’t an EV. I don’t hate EVs but I’m not the market for them for a variety of reasons.
I think this has potential on the other end of the business. Gut it, block off the windows, take off the chrome and doo-das and switch to regular springs and shocks and you have a right sized work van. The range should be enough to do a lot for a contractor, too.
Regardless, I don’t see it as a big seller on the US, but a work van version could sell in Europe and Asia well. I would love to see them available at mbvans.com, but I don’t see that happening.
>:0
Is this really an actual Mercedes-Benz or is some Chinese EV company about to get nailed for some serious trademark infringement?
Hope it sells, I just want to be chauffeured in it.
I guess from the inside you can’t see that comically bad exterior.
Well dang… I have been waiting for an EV minivan with good range (300 miles or so) to be available in the US, and here it is! Mercedes was NOT who I expected to see one from first, and it will be pricey no doubt, but when the EV9 lease is up I will definitely be looking at these.
I suspect this will be way too expensive for me, and I’ll be waiting for the inevitable EV Sienna, but glad to see more vans.
The front looks similar to the luxury vans of Asia, which was probably what they were going for. Funny they say the seats can be easily wheeled into your garage, as if this is meant to be used by families as a “normal” van. I’ll be curious to see how this sells over here.
Don’t assume these are targeting personal consumers…seemingly overnight every shuttle service in Los Angeles converted their fleet to Kia EV9s – they’re everywhere. Escalades are still king, but I wouldn’t be surprised if they add these to the fleet for shuttle / hotel services…
Also you forgot the coolest part: it has a split tail gate!
I like the Rivian delivery van-like tail light treatment. I like big lights, and I cannot lie.
I thought Kia Soul or Ioniq 9 at first lol
Someone who frequents those same taillight bars as Torch. Lol
electric is DOA. Also, I get this is for execs, but can I get a version that treats the driver so nice?
This is primarily for China where about 50% of new vehicles sold have plugs.
Well, considering that. Merc fucked up twice. They spent a bunch of money on a new van in a place that won’t buy it, and then brought it over here in a spec where we won’t buy it. Germany automotive tm is cooked through and through.
Why do you think this won’t sell in China – Mercedes’ largest market?
As to the USA – we will see. This is targeted at black car services not individuals
Here’s what I don’t understand:
Its supposed to be a “grand limousine”, right?
That means the important seats are in back.
So why is there a massive screen on the dash ahead of what is the least used seat in limousine world?
Kinda weird you didn’t mention anything about the middle side windows that roll down…which I believe is completely unique in this segment?
Meanwhile, “Electric car sales aren’t exactly booming…”
Perhaps you’ve noticed that folks with EVs are sitting pretty right about now – because the cost of recharging their vehicles didn’t just go up 25% this week.
This clearly has the range, power, and fast charging capabilities that the VW Buzzkill lacks.
And MB product cycles are 7+ years long – not 7 weeks long. So it’s planned for what’s happening 2, 5, 10 – even 20 years from now.
So why the continued negativity about EVs?
mordern merc design is disgusting and they will die because of it, enjoy the fall.
Electric car sales aren’t exactly booming. Energy prices fluctuate.
Also, where did gasoline skyrocket 25% where it has a significant impact on massive amount of consumers? I’m seeing around 10%-ish in a majority of US markets.
Anecdotally, my nearest major metropolitan area went from averaging $2.99/gallon for regular to $3.19 last week, briefly blipped to $3.29 (10% increase within 4 weeks), and is $3.23 as of this writing.
Looking at the EIA national average:
2/23 = $2.937
3/9 = $3.502
That is a 19% jump in 2 weeks.
19 isn’t 25 though. There’s been more drastic jumps before, and prices have been much, much higher before. We are also spoiled with how low our fuel prices are.
19% is the national average. There are places that have seen increases of more than 25%.
Right now I’m in Charlette, NC and people are freaking out. They went from $2.70 to $3.47 in 12 days.
The national average for diesel is up 28%
Around me (outside Atlanta) gas jumped from about $2.50/gal to $3.50/gal
Geez, that’s nuts.
So your personal assistant can monitor the futures market while you relax in the back with your favorite escort. My god, man, do you even billionaire?
The favorite escort is waiting at the hotel. The flexible small one is in the van. Didn’t Jeff teach you the ropes?
OK, so your favorite mobile escort in the limovan. I suppose if they are small enough and you chose the correct seating layout, you could probably fit several mobile escorts in the back.
Fancy Kristen would be very disappointed, if mere billionaires were not beneath her notice.
Middle windows on minivans rolling down are not a new thing. I’ve got a 07 Sienna that will roll down the windows on the sliding doors. I think my 03 MPV would roll them halfway down.
This I did not know.
Thanks for correcting me.
This can work because it’s everything the ID Buzz isn’t. It has real range, real performance, and real luxury.
It’s very clear this will be targeted towards black car services. All that tech and that big battery means this can’t be cross shopped on price with “regular” vans on sale.
This is how you do a van.
This would make a great Waymo
Waymo is already pretty great – once they can rid themselves of the constraints of having to use a car built for human drivers, it opens up a bunch of possibilities.
My first thought that these will be parked outside every airport in Europe as taxis.
Van + monoblocks = yes please!
Looks nice and it doesn’t appear to have a influencer inspired bordello interior. Shame about the EV only flex.
Other reports say that there will be hybrid and ICE engines offered later.
Yasss! If these depreciate the same way that the EQS does I’m buying my family one in about 3 years. My kids will just be getting into the beginning edge of roadtrip enjoyment.
If these sell as poorly as everyone expects, maybe I’ll be getting a cheap lease even sooner.
I’m really hoping the ID.Buzz leases start getting more appealing. If they get below $300 a month I’m picking one up.
You better hurry, the ID.Buzz is going on hiatus in the US market. It is supposed to be back for 2027, we’ll see if VW can survive that long!
Yep this looks like a better ID Buzz, albeit a lot uglier from the front (I kinda like the back). As a very happy Buzz owner with 3 kids the only real want is a bit more range. But I also picked up the buzz new for ~$50k out the door last year (mid 40’s seems like the going rate now) and this looks more like an 80-90k car to me. Depreciation should hit it like a ton of bricks, but I think I’d rather have the used VW with the arguably simpler design (Mercedes air suspensions make me nervous).
And in other news from the near future: Researchers claim that the speculations about a V-Class in the Midwest with seats that still slide and seat tracks that are NOT blocked by Matchbox cars, gummy bears and
remnants of tiny phalangesmelted crayons might actually be true. Witnesses claim the owner is a pool noodle delivery man who won his vehicle in a raffle. The core scientific body remains sceptical.Van content must be getting the clicks cause goddamn have we been getting the van content. And I’m here for it.
And while this isnt exactly my kind of minivan, I’m just happy to see it come over here.
Lexus is coming out with its own van in the states.
I saw one on the freeway in LA it was a hybrid LM model (Alphard / Vellfire) with manufacturer plates, but I couldn’t see if it was LHD or RHD.
Nice! Too bad I’m not in the van market.
Thank you for including the real life range and not the WLPT “liar” range.
Does recessed door handles mean electric? If so, no thanks.
Does anyone (humans, not Elon Musk) like electronic door handles or recessed handles? Anyone? It’s one of those “progress” things that is back asswards.
I think it was well received in China for awhile.
If someone showed me the front-ends of this and the Pacifica facelift with the rest of the vehicle obscured (and some blurriness introduced), I’m not sure I’d pick the Chrysler correctly.
As a minivan it should sell better than their pickup truck did over in Europe.
As an electric minivan it should sell as bad as their pickup truck did over in Europe.
I love it.
Since it’s Mercedes, I won’t dare pay the new car sticker price.
Since it’s Mercedes and electric, I expect it to be well within reach after the first lessee is done with it.
I was able to get 18% off a brand new G580, so you can probably get a really good lease about 1 year into sales.
I un-ironically love everything about this. The price will be stratospheric, so I’ll never be able to buy one. But, I can dream. It’s everything I dream about in my next vehicle (frfr).