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Ferrari Luce vs Audi e-tron GT

The Ferrari Luce is a five-door luxury sedan and Ferrari’s first series-production EV, built in Maranello for collectors and performance buyers who refuse to compromise on exclusivity. The Audi e-tron GT is a four-door electric grand tourer from Ingolstadt, aimed at wealthy daily drivers who want German engineering precision and a known dealer network. The Luce is scheduled for full reveal on May 25, 2026, with deliveries beginning later in the year — making this comparison timely for buyers deciding between a proven car and a highly anticipated debut.

Ferrari Luce vs Audi e-tron GT

Range & Charging

The Ferrari Luce carries a 122 kWh SK On battery with a claimed 330-mile (531 km) WLTP range. With an 880V architecture and 350 kW DC charging capability, the Luce is compatible with the fastest stations on the market. Real-world range has not been independently verified yet, given deliveries haven’t begun.

The Audi e-tron GT S offers a WLTP range of 483 km, while the RS variant delivers 446 km from a 97 kWh battery. The 10–80% charge takes approximately 18 minutes. Real-world figures typically land 10–15% below WLTP in mixed driving. The Audi’s charging infrastructure advantage is real — it works with most CCS networks already operating globally.

Price, Availability & Market Fit

Ferrari Luce pricing is expected to exceed €500,000 (approximately $535,000 USD), with African grey-market imports likely pushing well above ₦800 million NGN once duties and shipping are factored in. Production volumes will be limited, with reported waiting times of 12–18 months. The Audi S e-tron GT starts at $126,795 USD, with the RS Performance beginning at $168,295 — grey-market into Nigeria typically lands between ₦180–₦260 million NGN depending on trim and condition. The Audi is available now through parallel import channels in Lagos, Nairobi, and Johannesburg. This page helps buyers decide whether they’re purchasing a performance statement or a usable luxury daily driver.

Ecosystem & Rival Context

Ferrari’s EV lineup is currently just the Luce, supplemented by hybrids like the 296 GTB and SF90. Buyers wanting lower entry points within the brand have no electric alternative. Audi’s EV ecosystem includes the Q4 e-tron, Q6 e-tron, and Q8 e-tron — all available as grey-market imports at lower price points, offering a clear upgrade path. Outside both brands, the Porsche Taycan Turbo GT and Lucid Air Grand Touring are the strongest alternatives at similar price points. This comparison still wins because no rival at either price point carries the Luce’s collector value alongside the e-tron GT’s daily practicality — two genuinely different propositions.

Pros & Cons

Ferrari Luce: The 1,113 hp quad-motor powertrain delivers hypercar performance that no Audi can match, which matters if the driving event itself is the reason you bought the car. The Jony Ive-designed cabin sets a new interior benchmark for electric vehicles, offering an ownership experience unlike anything else. Rarity ensures the Luce will hold — and likely grow — its value in collector markets, a real consideration at this price level. On the downside, real-world charging infrastructure support is untested and deliveries haven’t begun, meaning early buyers carry adoption risk. Africa grey-market availability will be severely limited for years.

Audi e-tron GT: The e-tron GT is available now through established import channels across Nigeria, Kenya, and South Africa, which removes the uncertainty that comes with ordering an undelivered vehicle. Significant updates for 2025 brought more power, a longer range, and faster charging, making this generation genuinely competitive. Build quality and interior refinement are class-leading for a car at this price. However, at 278 miles EPA range, the RS variant falls short of rivals like the Lucid Air, which could frustrate range-conscious buyers. The e-tron GT also lacks the conversation-starting status of the Ferrari badge.

Quick Verdict

Choose the Ferrari Luce if exclusivity, collector value, and owning the first Ferrari EV define what this purchase means to you. Choose the Audi e-tron GT if you want a car you can import, register, and drive today with strong performance and proven reliability. For African buyers, the e-tron GT is the practical answer; the Luce is an aspiration. Both are strong cars — the difference is whether you’re buying a machine or a moment.

Related EV Comparisons

 
  Ferrari Luce Audi e-tron GT
Price $640,000.00 $126,000.00
Our Rating 5.5 7.0
Brand Ferrari AUDI
Category Electric Cars Electric Cars

MODEL

Full Model Name Ferrari Luce
Generation 1st Generation
Segment / Class Full-size Luxury Liftback Sedan
Available Trims / Variants Single variant at launch Audi S e-tron GT
Audi RS e-tron GT
Audi RS e-tron GT performance
Powertrain Options Quad-motor AWD (only option)
Additional Notes Model code F222. Internally referred to as "Elettrica" before the name Luce was confirmed on February 9, 2026.

LAUNCH

Reveal Date May 25, 2026 (Rome) 2024, June 18
Launch Year 2026
Availability Status Announced; deliveries from Q4 2026 Available to order. Released 2024, June
Brand / Manufacturer Ferrari
Country of origin Italy Germany
Assembly Country Italy (E-Building, Maranello)
Markets Available Global (limited volume)
Grey Market Import Possible but not officially supported
Base Price (USD) ~$640,000 (€550,000) $ 127,400 € 126,000 - Audi S e-tron GT
€ 147,500 - Audi RS e-tron GT
$ 168,900 € 160,500 - Audi RS e-tron GT performance
Additional Notes Ferrari is keeping production relatively limited, consistent with its long-standing exclusivity strategy. Already oversubscribed at launch.

BATTERY

Battery Capacity 122 kWh gross / 117 kWh usable 97 kWh usable, 105 kWh total
Battery Chemistry NMC (Nickel Manganese Cobalt) Liquid-cooled (800V type)
Battery Architecture 880V
Range (WLTP/CLTC/EPA) ~530 km (329 miles EPA approx.) WLTP 378 mi WLTP - Audi S e-tron GT
372 mi WLTP - Audi RS e-tron GT
368 mi WLTP - Audi RS e-tron GT performance
Energy Consumption ~25 kWh/100 km (est.) 290 Wh/mi WLTP - Audi S e-tron GT
296 Wh/mi WLTP - Audi RS e-tron GT
301 Wh/mi WLTP - Audi RS e-tron GT performance
Regen Braking (Max kW) Yes, up to 400 kW. 3 levels, via driving modes, optional steering wheel paddles
Heat Pump
AC Charging (Max kW) Type 2 11 kW
Type 2 22 kW
DC Charging (Max kW) 350 kW CCS 800V 320 kW max, 10-80% in 18 min
Charging Time (10–80%) ~19 minutes at 350 kW, with an average charging speed of 253 kW
Cell Brand SK On
Additional Notes Battery pack developed in-house by Ferrari; cells supplied by SK On.

PERFORMANCE

Motor Type Radial-flow Permanent Synchronous (Halbach array)
Motor Configuration Quad-motor, one per wheel, AWD
Front Motor Output (kW / HP) 105 kW / 141 hp each (×2)
Rear Motor Output (kW / HP) 310 kW / 416 hp each (×2)
Power Output (kW / hp) 772 kW / 1,035 hp AWD 680 hp (500 kW) - Audi S e-tron GT
AWD 857 hp (630 kW) - Audi RS e-tron GT
AWD 925 hp (680 kW) - Audi RS e-tron GT performance
Peak Power (kW / hp) 830 kW / 1,113 hp
Torque (Nm) 990 Nm combined 740 Nm (546 lb-ft) - Audi S e-tron GT
865 Nm (638 lb-ft) - Audi RS e-tron GT
1027 Nm (757 lb-ft) - Audi RS e-tron GT performance
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. 2.5 seconds 3.3 sec 0-60 mph (3.4 sec 0-62 mph) - Audi S e-tron GT
2.8 sec 0-62 mph - Audi RS e-tron GT
2.4 sec 0-60 mph (2.5 sec 0-62 mph) - Audi RS e-tron GT performance
Top Speed (km/h / mph) 310 km/h (192 mph) 152 mph (245 km/h) - Audi S e-tron GT
155 mph (250 km/h) - Audi RS e-tron GT
155 mph (250 km/h) - Audi RS e-tron GT performance
Transmission / Drive Single-speed, AWD 2-speed automatic with decoupling of the rear-axle
Rear-Wheel Steering Yes (four-wheel steering)
Drive Mode Yes
Launch Control Yes
Torque Vectoring Yes, on both axles
Simulated Sound Yes — described as resembling an electric guitar
Additional Notes During cruising, front motors disconnect to maximize range. The Halbach array directs magnetic flux toward the stator to maximize torque density — a setup adapted from Ferrari's Formula One powertrains. Weight distribution is 47:53 (front:rear).

BODY

Body Style 5-door Liftback Sedan 4 dour sedan, 5 seats
Platform / Architecture Bespoke Ferrari EV platform (880V) PPE
Dimensions (L×W×H mm) ~5,019 × 1,999 × 1,539 mm 4989 x 1964 x 1414 mm (196.4 x 77.3 x 55.7 in)
Drag Coefficient (Cd) Lowest of any Ferrari road car ever built 0.24 Cd
Wheelbase (mm) 2,959 mm 2900 mm (114.2 in)
Kerb Weight (kg) 2,260 kg EU: 2310 kg unladen, 2840 kg gross - Audi S e-tron GT
EU: 2395 kg unladen, 2860 kg gross - Audi RS e-tron GT
EU: 2395 kg unladen, 2860 kg gross - Audi RS e-tron GT performance
Suspension (Front / Rear) 48V active suspension front and rear — reaction time so fast that anti-roll bars are not required Adaptive Air with 2-chamber/2-valve technology, rear-axle steering up to 2.8˚; double wishbones
Wheel Size (inches) R20, R21
Trunk/Boot Capacity (L) EU: 405 l
Frunk/Bonnet Capacity (L) 81 l
Towing Capacity (kg) No
Aerodynamics Front suspension can lower the car by 10 mm at speed to improve efficiency and stability.
Additional Notes ~5 cm shorter in height than the Purosangue but roughly the same footprint.

SAFETY

Airbags (count) Side airbags, front and rear, including head airbag system, front seats knee airbags
Anti-lock Braking System (ABS) Yes
Electronic Brakeforce Distribution (EBD) Yes
Electronic Stability Control (ESC) Yes
Traction Control System (TCS) Yes
Tyre Pressure Monitoring (TPMS) Yes
Child Seat Anchors (ISOFIX) Yes
Reversing Camera Yes
Hill Start Assist Yes
Driver Assistance (ADAS) Night Vision Assist, Lane Keeping Assist, Traffic Sign Recognition, Warn and Brake Assist, Pedestrian/cyclists protection, Exit Warning, Rear and Front Cross Traffic Alert, High Beam Assist
Additional Notes Ferrari debuts a new Vehicle Control Unit architecture in the Luce.

COMFORT

Seating Capacity 5 Heated and ventilated front seats with massage, heated rear seats
Seat Material Leather (premium)
Power Seats Yes
Climate Control Yes (multi-zone expected)
Steering Wheel Custom Ferrari unit
Roof Type Fixed Panoramic glass sunroof (fixed) with variable light transmission
Ambient Lighting Yes
Gear Selector Glass construction
Noise Insulation High (acoustic priority)
Bluetooth / Wi-Fi Yes Wireless Android Auto and Apple CarPlay
Wireless Charging Yes
Parking Aids 360 degree cameras
Automated parking
Front and rear sensors, 360 camera, reversing camera, remote park assist
Additional Notes Interior designed by LoveFrom (Jony Ive and Marc Newson) in collaboration with Centro Stile Ferrari. Ferrari describes propulsion options as "power levels" rather than conventional gears. 3-zone climate control system

DISPLAYS

Centre Screen (inches) Yes 10.1" touchscreen
Driver's Display (inches) Yes 12.3"
Head-Up Display (HUD) Yes
Operating System Ferrari proprietary
Physical Controls Jony Ive deliberately reintroduced physical/tactile controls below the central touchscreen — a departure from his touchscreen-first Apple philosophy.
Additional Notes Passenger display screen

LIGHTING

Headlight Type (LED/Matrix/Laser) LED / Matrix
Daytime Running Lights (DRL) Yes
Interior Ambient Lighting Yes

INFOTAINMENT & AUDIO

Navigation System Yes

TECHNOLOGY

Smartphone App Control Yes
Keyless Entry / Start Yes
Over-the-Air Map Updates Yes
Additional Notes Ferrari claims the Luce features one of the most advanced dynamic control systems ever installed in a production car.

OWNERSHIP

Official Dealer Network Ferrari authorized dealers globally
Spare Parts Availability Limited (low-volume production)
Resale Value Expected to be very high (oversubscribed at launch)
Roadside Assistance Yes (Ferrari official)

Note

Data Source Ferrari official reveal (May 25, 2026), Wikipedia, InsideEVs, Top Gear, EVKX.net, Motor1, Autobics
Last Updated May 27, 2026
Additional Notes TBC fields reflect information not yet officially confirmed by Ferrari. Some figures (e.g. peak vs. rated power) vary slightly across sources — Wikipedia cites 1,113 hp peak; most outlets report 1,035 hp rated.
Editor's Note The Ferrari Luce is a landmark car but has zero official presence in Africa. For evcarlatest.com, the key angles are: price in NGN (~₦1 billion+), grey market feasibility, comparison to Porsche Taycan Turbo S, and what it signals about ultra-luxury EV direction globally.
Disclaimer We can not guarantee that the information on this page is 100% correct
  Ferrari Luce Audi e-tron GT

Disclaimer Note

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

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