
A year after Volkswagen and SAIC previewed the ID. ERA concept in Shanghai, the production version has now reached the Chinese market in the form of the ID. ERA 9X. Preorders are already open, making this Volkswagen’s first extended-range electric vehicle and one of its clearest signs yet that the brand is reshaping its China strategy around local tastes and local technology.
Prices currently run from 329,800 yuan to 379,800 yuan, which works out to roughly $47,700 to $55,000 at the announced presale figures.
The ID. ERA 9X looks very different from the more conservative Volkswagen design language American buyers usually associate with the brand. Up front, the usual grille is replaced by a smoother, more closed-off face with slim LED running lights and vertically arranged lighting elements lower in the fascia.
A 192-line lidar unit sits above the windshield as part of the Momenta assisted driving system, while retractable door handles and a full-width rear light strip help give the SUV a more modern Chinese market look. Volkswagen says the model is offered in six exterior colors, rides on 20 or 21 inch wheels, and posts a drag coefficient of 0.253, which is a strong figure for something this large.
Size is a major part of the story. The ID. ERA 9X measures about 205.0 inches long, 78.6 inches wide, and 71.3 inches tall, with a wheelbase of 120.9 inches. That makes it the largest Volkswagen-branded model globally, and it was clearly designed with Chinese buyers in mind, where generous cabin space remains a major selling point in the large family SUV segment.
A Cabin Built Around Screens And Comfort
Inside, the six-seat cabin follows the same trend now dominating China’s premium EV market. The dashboard features a pair of 15.6-inch displays, while rear passengers get a 21.4-inch fold-down ceiling screen. Volkswagen also fits a head-up display, a 2+2+2 seating layout, second-row zero-gravity seats, and a 27-speaker Era Sound audio system.
Cargo space ranges from 7.4 cubic feet to 35.8 cubic feet, depending on seat configuration. In other words, this is less a traditional Volkswagen interior and more a rolling tech lounge aimed directly at buyers who expect screens, voice interaction, and luxury style comfort throughout all three rows.
Range Extender Power For China’s Market
Under the skin, the ID.4 uses a 1.5-liter turbocharged EA211 range extender engine rated at about 141 hp. It does not drive the wheels directly. Instead, it works as a generator for the battery and electric motors. The standard dual motor all-wheel-drive setup produces 496 hp and is paired with a 51.1 kWh battery.
Volkswagen says that version can travel up to 216 miles on electric power alone under the CLTC test cycle and 1,001 miles in combined operation. Higher trims use a 65.2 kWh battery and raise output to 510 hp, with electric range increasing to 252 miles and total claimed range reaching 1,026 miles. Charging from 10 to 80% is quoted at 16.5 minutes on the 800-volt platform.
Chassis hardware is also unusually serious for a big three-row SUV. The ID. ERA 9X gets rear-wheel steering, dual-chamber air suspension, and adaptive damping. Volkswagen says the most powerful version delivers 660 Nm of torque, which is about 487 lb-ft, and reaches 60 mph in roughly the mid-5-second range. That is quick for something this large, and it reinforces the broader point of the vehicle. This is not just a family hauler with extra screens. It is Volkswagen’s attempt to answer the fast-moving Chinese market with a model tailored almost entirely around local expectations. The full launch is scheduled for April 25 at the Beijing Auto Show.
This article originally appeared on Autorepublika.com and has been republished with permission by Guessing Headlights. AI-assisted translation was used, followed by human editing and review.
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