If you need three rows of seats and want to go electric, your best options in 2026 span from the £38,595 Peugeot E-5008 to the £65,000 Kia EV9, with genuinely useful choices at every price point in between. The cheapest models trade range for affordability, while anything over £55,000 buys adult-usable third-row seats and 300+ miles of WLTP range. Below, we break down seven 7-seat EVs across this budget, compare them head-to-head on the numbers that actually matter for family use, and tell you which one to buy depending on what you’re carrying and how far you’re going.

Quick Summary: 7-Seat EVs at a Glance

  • Cheapest option: Citroën ë-Berlingo / Peugeot e-Rifter family, from around £34,000 — fine for the school run, not for road trips
  • Best value all-rounder: Peugeot E-5008, from £38,595, with up to 414 miles WLTP on the larger battery
  • Most affordable “proper” 7-seater: Mercedes-Benz EQB, from £52,810 — cheapest premium badge with 7 seats as standard
  • Best third-row comfort under £70k: Kia EV9 and Hyundai Ioniq 9, both offering adult-sized rear seating
  • Fastest charging: Kia EV9 and Hyundai Ioniq 9, both on 800V-adjacent architecture, 10–80% in under 25 minutes

The Budget Entry: Van-Based 7-Seaters (From ~£34,000)

7 Family EVs With 7 Seats: From £35,000 to £70,000

The Peugeot e-Rifter is one of the cheapest 7-seater electric cars on sale, starting from £33,000, with the Citroën ë-Berlingo, Vauxhall Combo Life Electric and Toyota Proace City Verso EV all priced within a few hundred pounds of each other in the same segment. These are van-derived MPVs rather than SUVs, so don’t expect style — but they do offer a genuinely flat load floor and easy access.

The trade-off is range. The e-Rifter’s 50kWh battery gives a real-world range of around 140 miles, which covers daily school runs comfortably but won’t get you far on a family road trip. Charging is modest too, at 7kW AC, meaning a full top-up takes roughly four hours at home.

Best for: Families who mostly drive locally and want the lowest possible entry price into 7-seat EV ownership.

Peugeot E-5008: The Best-Value All-Rounder (From £38,595)

7 Family EVs With 7 Seats: From £35,000 to £70,000

The Peugeot E-5008 starts at around £38,595, making it one of the most affordable 7-seater electric cars available in the UK. Unlike the van-based options above, it’s a proper SUV with genuine third-row usability and a 21-inch panoramic dashboard.

Buyers choose between two battery sizes — 97kWh and 73kWh — rated for 414 and 311 miles of official WLTP range respectively, paired with a 227bhp or 207bhp motor. Both trims support 160kW fast charging, so a 20–80% top-up takes around half an hour. Boot space with all seven seats in place is a modest 348 litres, so a middle-row-down configuration is worth planning for longer trips.

Best for: Families wanting the longest range in this price bracket without stepping into premium SUV territory.

Mercedes-Benz EQB: Premium Badge, Realistic Price (From £52,810)

7 Family EVs With 7 Seats: From £35,000 to £70,000

The Mercedes-Benz EQB has a starting RRP of £52,810, making it the most affordable route into a badge-conscious seven-seat EV. All UK EQBs get seven seats as standard, though the rearmost pair are best suited to children.

The entry-level 250+ trim uses a 70.5kWh battery for up to 320 miles of range and 0-62mph in just under nine seconds, while twin-motor variants trade some range for extra performance. Charging tops out at 100kW, meaning a 10–80% charge takes just over half an hour — noticeably slower than newer 800V rivals further up this list.

Best for: Buyers who want a premium interior and brand cachet without spending Kia EV9 money.

Tesla Model Y (7-Seat): The Familiar Choice (From ~£54,995)

7 Family EVs With 7 Seats: From £35,000 to £70,000

Tesla brought seven-seat capability back to the UK Model Y range in early 2026. It’s a £2,500 option available only on the Premium Long Range All-Wheel Drive trim, good for 372 miles of range, using two front-facing, collapsible jump seats accessed via the sliding second row.

The trade-off is luggage space — you lose around 100 litres when the third row is spaced, though Tesla states there’s still a useful 381 litres of space even with the extra seats occupied. It remains the only seven-seat Tesla on sale in the UK now that Model X has been discontinued here.

Best for: Existing Tesla-ecosystem families who need occasional extra seats without a huge SUV.

VW ID.Buzz LWB: The Roomiest Cabin (From £59,545)

7 Family EVs With 7 Seats: From £35,000 to £70,000

The long-wheelbase ID.Buzz is arguably the most spacious car on this list. It’s priced from £59,545 to buy outright, and pairs a larger 86kWh battery with genuinely usable adult space across all three rows thanks to its MPV proportions rather than SUV styling.

Official range sits at up to 293 miles from a full charge, and it charges at up to 185kW, with a 10-80% top-up taking 26-30 minutes. Style trim moves the price to £63,800–£64,345, while the performance GTX version starts from £67,435.

Best for: Families who prioritize interior space and access (via sliding doors) over SUV looks.

Hyundai Ioniq 9: Range Leader (From £64,995)

7 Family EVs With 7 Seats: From £35,000 to £70,000

The Ioniq 9 measures 5.06m long with a three-row seating layout, and gets a 110.3kWh battery mated to a single rear motor producing 215bhp for 385 miles of range. Dual-motor all-wheel-drive and performance variants are also available, with prices climbing to nearly £76,000 for the fastest, best-equipped version.

Third-row legroom is a genuine strength here, with independently confirmed figures putting it well ahead of most SUV-based rivals for adult comfort. Charging peaks at 350kW, delivering a 10-80% top-up in around 24 minutes — among the fastest in this class.

Best for: Families who do long motorway trips and want to minimize charging stops.

Kia EV9: The Segment Benchmark (From £65,000)

7 Family EVs With 7 Seats: From £35,000 to £70,000

The Kia EV9 represents the gold standard for electric seven-seaters, built on Kia’s 800V E-GMP platform with genuinely adult-friendly third-row seating. The 99.8kWh battery delivers 349 miles WLTP range, with 233kW charging enabling a 10-80% top-up in approximately 24 minutes — best-in-class for this price bracket.

Top-spec models can even be had as six-seaters with captain’s chairs in the middle row. It sits right at the top of the £35k–£70k range covered here, but delivers the most complete package for large families who need every row to work for adults, not just children.

Best for: Families who need all three rows to comfortably seat adults, with no compromises.

Comparison Table

ModelPrice FromBatteryWLTP Range10–80% ChargeBoot (7 seats)
Citroën ë-Berlingo / e-Rifter~£34,00050kWh~140mi real-world~4hrs (7kW AC)Small
Peugeot E-5008£38,59573/97kWh311–414mi~30 min348L
Mercedes-Benz EQB£52,81066.5–70.5kWh248–320mi~30 min495L (seats folded)
Tesla Model Y (7-seat)~£54,995Long Range pack372mi~25–30 min381L
VW ID.Buzz LWB£59,54586kWh293mi26–30 min306L
Hyundai Ioniq 9£64,995110.3kWh385mi~24 minLarge
Kia EV9£65,00099.8kWh349mi~24 minLarge

Prices are UK on-the-road guide prices and may vary by trim; verify current pricing with the manufacturer before publishing or purchasing.

Bottom Line

For most UK families, the Peugeot E-5008 offers the best balance of price and range under £40,000, while the Kia EV9 remains the segment leader if your budget stretches to £65,000 and you need adults to sit comfortably in every row. If you’re choosing on charging speed alone, the Hyundai Ioniq 9 and Kia EV9 are the clear winners at this price point.

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