The 2027 Lexus TZ and Lexus UX 300e are both electric SUVs from Lexus — but they serve entirely different buyers within the same premium brand. The TZ is a large three-row luxury SUV built for families needing seven seats, long-range confidence, and flagship-grade refinement. The UX 300e is Lexus’s smallest electric SUV, sitting below the NX and RX in the lineup, targeting urban professionals who want Lexus quality in a compact, easy-to-park package. With the TZ arriving in late 2026 and grey-market UX 300e units already circulating in Nigeria, Kenya, and South Africa, buyers choosing between Lexus’s entry and flagship EVs need clear guidance.

Range & Charging
The Lexus TZ carries a 96 kWh battery with an estimated EPA range of up to 300 miles and supports DC fast charging at up to 150 kW, completing 10–80% in around 35 minutes. The UX 300e is considerably less capable on both fronts: its 72.8 kWh battery delivers a WLTP combined range of up to 450 km (280 miles) on 17-inch wheels, but real-world results are significantly lower — in What Car?’s Real Range test it covered just 170 miles. The charging gap is the more critical difference: the UX 300e’s DC fast charging is limited to 50 kW, meaning a 10–80% charge takes approximately 60–70 minutes — roughly double the TZ’s expected time. AC charging on the UX 300e runs at 6.6 kW standard, 11 kW on three-phase markets. For African intercity driving, the UX 300e’s real-world range and slow DC charging are significant practical limitations.
Price, Availability & Market Fit
The UX 300e is priced from approximately £48,000–£55,000 in the UK (~$60,000–$70,000 USD), translating to roughly ₦92M–₦107M, KES 7.8M–9.1M, or ZAR 1.09M–1.27M at grey-market estimates before duties. The Lexus TZ is expected to start near $70,000 — comparable to the UX 300e’s upper pricing. The UX 300e is available now in Europe, the UK, and some Asia-Pacific markets but is not sold in the US. The TZ targets a late 2026 launch. This comparison resolves a specific dilemma: at similar import costs, should you buy the available compact Lexus now, or wait for the larger, more capable flagship? Edmunds
Ecosystem & Rival Context
Both buyers should also consider the Lexus RZ — a two-row mid-size EV that sits between these two models in size and price, with faster charging than the UX 300e. Outside Lexus, the BMW iX1 and Volvo EX40 compete with the UX 300e on compact luxury EV territory, while the Mercedes EQS SUV and BMW iX rival the TZ on three-row premium ground. What makes the Lexus-vs-Lexus comparison valuable is that it isolates the size and use-case decision without changing the brand — important for buyers committed to the Lexus ownership ecosystem.
Pros & Cons
Lexus TZ: Three rows make it genuinely functional for large families on African roads where vehicle-sharing is common. Its 150 kW DC charging rate is three times faster than the UX 300e, cutting charging stops significantly on longer journeys. The flagship positioning means a more fully equipped interior relative to its price. On the downside, it is not yet available and specs remain manufacturer-estimated rather than EPA-confirmed.
Lexus UX 300e: Its compact dimensions make urban driving, parking, and manoeuvring in dense African cities like Lagos or Nairobi much easier. It is available now via grey-market channels, removing the late 2026 wait the TZ requires. The lower kerb weight and smaller footprint suit buyers who drive primarily within cities. However, its 50 kW DC charging ceiling makes longer intercity trips genuinely inconvenient, and real-world range falling to 170 miles in testing is a concern for any route beyond urban use.
Quick Verdict
Choose the Lexus TZ if you need three rows, faster charging, and flagship capability — and your purchase timeline allows for a late 2026 delivery. Choose the UX 300e if a compact Lexus for urban daily driving is enough, you want something available now, and your routes stay within city limits where charging infrastructure exists. At overlapping price points, the TZ delivers considerably more vehicle for the money once it launches.
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| Price | $47,000.00 |
| Our Rating | |
| Brand | LEXUS LEXUS |
| Category | Electric Cars Electric Cars |
| Full Model Name | 2027 Lexus TZ |
| Generation | 1st Generation |
| Segment / Class | Full-size Premium Three-Row Electric SUV |
| Available Trims / Variants | Lexus UX 300e 73kWh |
| Powertrain Options | Dual-motor AWD (standard on all trims) |
| Additional Notes | Lexus' first three-row all-electric SUV; six-seat configuration with second-row captain's chairs |
| Reveal Date |
May 6, 2026
2022, October 12 |
| Launch Year | 2027 (US on sale end of 2026) |
| Availability Status | Announced Available to order. Released 2023, April |
| Brand / Manufacturer | Lexus (Toyota Motor Corporation) |
| Country of origin | Japan Japan |
| Markets Available | US (end of 2026); Europe, Japan, China, other markets (early 2027) |
| Base Price (USD) | £ 47,500 |
| Battery Capacity | 76.96 kWh or 95.82 kWh (gross) 72.8 kWh total |
| Battery Chemistry | Lithium-ion Air-cooled Li-ion (400V type) |
| Thermal Management | Active; includes Battery Preconditioning and Driving Preconditioning |
| Range (WLTP/CLTC/EPA) | 280 mi WLTP |
| Energy Consumption | 269 Wh/mi WLTP |
| Regen Braking (Max kW) | 5 levels |
| Heat Pump | |
| AC Charging (Max kW) |
11 kW standard; 19 kW optional
Type 2 6.6 kW |
| DC Charging (Max kW) | 150 kW CHAdeMO 50 kW |
| Charging Time (10–80%) | ~35 minutes |
| Battery Preheating | Yes (Battery Preconditioning confirmed) |
| Additional Notes | US model uses NACS port with Lexus-first 2-in-1 AC+DC combined charging port; CCS1 adapter required for non-NACS DC chargers |
| Motor Configuration | Dual-motor AWD (DIRECT4) |
| Front Motor Output (kW / HP) | 167 kW / 224 hp |
| Rear Motor Output (kW / HP) | 167 kW / 224 hp |
| Power Output (kW / hp) | 300 kW / 402 hp FWD 150 kW (204 hp) |
| Peak Power (kW / hp) | 300 kW / 402 hp |
| Torque (Nm) | 500 Nm (369 lb-ft) 300 Nm (221 lb-ft) |
| 0–100 km/h / 0-60 mph (seconds) The acceleration numbers are an easy way to compare car performance. We list either time from 0 to 100 km/h or time from 0 to 60mph, depending on which number(s) the manufacturers provide. The lower the acceleration time, the higher performance the car is. | 5.4 seconds 7.5 sec 0-100 km/h |
| Top Speed (km/h / mph) | 160 km/h (99 mph) |
| Transmission / Drive | Single-speed; AWD standard Single-speed |
| Rear-Wheel Steering | Yes — Dynamic Rear Steering (DRS), up to 4 degrees; optional on some grades |
| Drive Mode | 5 modes including Rear Comfort mode |
| Torque Vectoring | Yes — DIRECT4 system |
| Simulated Sound | Yes — includes LFA V10 sound simulation |
| Additional Notes | Turning radius 5.24 m (17.2 ft) with DRS active; 5.79 m (19.0 ft) without |
| Body Style | 5-door SUV, 3-row, 6-seat 5 door SUV, 5 seats |
| Platform / Architecture |
TNGA (Toyota New Global Architecture), dedicated BEV layout
TNGA: GA-C |
| Dimensions (L×W×H mm) | 5,100 × 1,989 × 1,704 mm (200.8 × 78.3 × 67.1 in) 4495 x 1840 x 1545 mm (177.0 x 72.4 x 60.8 in) |
| Drag Coefficient (Cd) |
0.27
0.31 Cd |
| Wheelbase (mm) | 3,050 mm (120.1 in) 2640 mm (103.9 in) |
| Kerb Weight (kg) | EU: 1885 kg unladen, 2245 kg gross |
| Suspension (Front / Rear) | MacPherson struts / Multi-link Front MacPherson struts, rear Trailing Wishbone |
| Wheel Size (inches) | 20-inch (standard) or 22-inch (optional) R17, R18 |
| Tyre Size | 255/55 R20 or 255/45 R22 |
| Trunk/Boot Capacity (L) | 390 L (13.8 cu ft — behind third row) EU: 367 l |
| Frunk/Bonnet Capacity (L) | No |
| Towing Capacity (kg) | 1,587 kg (3,500 lbs) No |
| Turning Circle (m) | 5.24 m (17.2 ft) with DRS |
| Sunroof | Yes — panoramic glass roof with power sunshade |
| Aerodynamics | Flush door handles, aerodynamic mirrors, underbody fins, air dams, optimized wheel covers |
| Additional Notes | Body uses high-rigidity adhesives, laser screw welding, and aluminum components |
| Airbags (count) |
Side airbags, front and rear, head airbag system |
| Anti-lock Braking System (ABS) | Yes |
| Electronic Brakeforce Distribution (EBD) | Yes |
| Electronic Stability Control (ESC) | Yes |
| Traction Control System (TCS) | Yes |
| Low-Speed Pedestrian Warning | Yes (low-speed) |
| Tyre Pressure Monitoring (TPMS) | Yes |
| Child Seat Anchors (ISOFIX) | Yes (walk-in button on second-row seats to aid access with child seats installed) |
| Reversing Camera | Yes |
| Hill Start Assist | Yes |
| Driver Assistance (ADAS) |
Lexus Safety System+ 4.0 (LSS+ 4.0)
Front radar and camera. Lexus Safety System, Pre-Collision System with pedestrian detection, Lane Keep Assist, Lane Trace Assist, Road Sign Assist, High Beam Assist, Secondary Collision brake, Blind Spot Monitor, Rear Cross-Traffic Alert, Emergency brake signal Intersection Turning Assist, Emergency Steering Assist - 2022 model |
| ADAS Features | Intersection Turn Assist, Full-Speed Dynamic Radar Cruise Control, Lane Departure Alert with Steering Assist, Lane Change Assist |
| Autonomous Driving Level | Level 2 (advanced ADAS) |
| Crash Test Ratings | NCAP 2019: 5 stars |
| Additional Notes | No hands-free highway driving feature confirmed |
| Seating Capacity |
6 (three rows; second-row captain's chairs)
Heated front and rear Heated and ventilated front seats, heated rear seats |
| Roof Type | Panoramic glass with power sunshade Panoramic glass roof |
| Ambient Lighting | Yes |
| Bluetooth / Wi-Fi |
Wired or wireless (2022 model) Android Auto and Apple CarPlay |
| Parking Aids | Yes 4 front and 4 rear sensors, 360 camera, reversing camera |
| Additional Notes | Flat-floor architecture; removable rear centre console allows third-row walkthrough access; storage includes front centre console compartment and two-tier rear tray |
| Centre Screen (inches) |
~14 inches (not officially confirmed for TZ; based on shared Highlander EV platform)
7.0" or 10.3" touchscreen - 2018 model 8.0" or 12.3" touchscreen - 2022 model |
| Driver's Display (inches) | Digital instrument cluster Yes |
| Head-Up Display (HUD) | Yes |
| Mirror Link / Apple CarPlay / Android Auto | Yes — wireless |
| Physical Controls | Limited; climate functions primarily in touchscreen |
| Additional Notes |
| Headlight Type (LED/Matrix/Laser) | LED (Matrix not confirmed) |
| Daytime Running Lights (DRL) | Yes |
| Tail Light Design | Full-width LED taillights |
| Navigation System | Yes |
| Vehicle-to-Load (V2L) | Yes — AC external power supply via rear AC inlet with adapter |
| Remote Climate Control | Yes (departure time preconditioning) |
| Additional Notes | Battery management includes: Driving Preconditioning, Optimal Charging (Auto), Departure Time Preconditioning |
| Official Dealer Network | Lexus dealers (244 in the US) |
| Roadside Assistance | standard Lexus coverage |
| Data Source | Lexus USA Newsroom, Lexus EU Newsroom, Car and Driver, Edmunds, InsideEVs, Destination Charged, HiConsumption, The Car Guide |
| Last Updated | May 2026 |
| Additional Notes | All unconfirmed specs flagged above. Range figure (~300 miles EPA) is Lexus' own estimate, not a certified EPA result. Pricing is industry estimate only. Full specs, trim breakdown, and confirmed pricing expected later in 2026. |
| Editor's Note | Grey-market availability in Africa is unlikely at launch. African buyers tracking this model should note the 150 kW DC cap and limited public charging infrastructure compatibility outside NACS markets. |
| Disclaimer | We can not guarantee that the information on this page is 100% correct |
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Specifications sourced from manufacturer data and may reflect WLTP, CLTC, or EPA test conditions. Import prices in your local are estimates based on grey-market landing costs and exclude duties, clearing fees, and local taxes. Figures are subject to change without notice. Always verify with your local importer before purchase. We can not guarantee that the information on this page is 100% correct