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Toyota introduces an electric C-HR and updated bZ4X for Europe

The new bZ4X will get more range and power, and faster charging later this year.

The new bZ4X will get more range and power, and faster charging later this year.

Toyota C-HR Plus EV
Toyota C-HR Plus EV
The all-electric Toyota C-HR Plus.
Image: Toyota
Wes Davis
is a former weekend editor who covered tech and entertainment. He has written news, reviews, and more as a tech journalist since 2020.

Toyota announced updates to its European EV offerings, including an electric version of the Toyota C-HR called the C-HR Plus, and a refreshed bZ4X that addresses many of the electric crossover’s shortcomings.

The C-HR Plus is built on Toyota’s e-TNGA platform and comes in two battery options: 57.7 kWh with 455km (about 283 miles) of range, with a second trim with a 77 kWh battery that can power the vehicle for 600km (about 373 miles). Outwardly, the car has some noticeable differences from its hybrid predecessors, but keeps enough of the look to be recognizably part of the C-HR line.

Side photo of the C-HR Plus
Three quarter front view of the C-HR Plus.
Direct-on shot of front of C-HR.
Interior dashboard image of the C-HR Plus.
Closeup of the front of the C-HR Plus.
Closeup of the C-HR from the rear.
1/6Image: Toyota

The updated bZ4X — a naming strategy Toyota eventually plans to retire — will use the same dual-battery, e-TNGA platform setup as the smaller C-HR Plus, albeit with a slightly smaller 73.1kWh battery in the long-range version. Likewise, it has a lower cruising range of 445km (about 276.5 miles) or 573km (about 356 miles).

bZ4X in three quarter front view
bZ4X three quarter rear view
bZ4X from the side
bZ4X close-up of the front bumper and headlights
Closeup of the bZ4X driver’s door showing a rearview mirror and charging port on the front left quarter panel.
Closeup of the bZ4X headlight, driver’s side
1/6Image: Toyota

Those are some big range gains compared to the 2023 bZ4X, which our review concluded wasn’t worth its “nearly $50,000 price tag.” The long-range version of that model offered an EPA-estimated 252 miles of range, which isn’t far off from the up-to-267-mile range Toyota claims for the base model $15,000 bZ3X sold in China.

Toyota says the car will have battery pre-conditioning, something it lacked before, “with a development target of rapid charging in approximately 30 minutes under cold conditions,” which the small print specifies as -10 degrees Celsius, or about 14 degrees Fahrenheit.

Toyota spokesperson Rick Bourgoise told The Verge in an email that everything it announced today is for Europe and there are “no U.S. product announcements at this time.” But given how well the bZ4X has sold in the US, it seems likely these updates will make it to the stateside line as well. Both cars are due to be released in Europe in the second half of this year.

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