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Tested: 2021 Mercedes-AMG E63 S Wagon Simply Hauls

Photo credit: Mercedes-AMG
Photo credit: Mercedes-AMG

From Car and Driver

If you remember when the station wagon was the quintessential American family car, congratulations—you've been around for a while. That means you've seen wagons all but disappear from the nation's driveways over the years and then more recently reappear in smaller numbers dressed like SUVs, with plastic body cladding and jacked-up suspensions. But that fate has not befallen the 2021 Mercedes-AMG E63 S wagon, which remains a low-riding, sticky-tired, 603-hp raised middle finger to the current faux-SUV wagon trend.

AMG's E63 S wagon is a family hauler from hell that can blaze down a twisty road like a supercar yet handle any domestic task you throw at it. Schlep the kids to school? Done. Pick up lawn fertilizer from Lowe's? No problem. Dust a new Mustang GT500 to 60 mph? Hold my Starbucks. How could we not love this car?

Photo credit: Mercedes-AMG
Photo credit: Mercedes-AMG

For the record, Mercedes has caved to the public's predilection for SUV-styled wagons with the 2021 E450 All-Terrain. But the company also has a long history of offering E-class wagons that have been hot-rodded by AMG. The current-generation E63 S wagon first arrived for the 2018 model year. For 2021, it's undergone a mild update along with the rest of the E-class lineup.

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Only a few things about the E63 S have changed with the refresh, which we and lead-footed moms and dads everywhere should be thankful for, given how exciting this car already was. Remember that the E-class's platform undergirds AMG's gut-punching GT63 S four-door coupe, so the wagon has some serious performance chops.

Photo credit: Mercedes-AMG
Photo credit: Mercedes-AMG

The hardware that supplies the thrills is virtually unchanged from last year's model. The E63 S is powered by a familiar 603-hp twin-turbo 4.0-liter V-8, which sends its 627 pound-feet of torque through an AMG-tuned nine-speed automatic transmission and 4Matic+ all-wheel-drive system. The wagon rides on standard air springs and adaptive dampers and grabs the pavement with 20-inch Michelin Pilot Sport 4S summer tires, sized 265/35R-20 in front and 295/30R-20 at the rear. There are five conventional driving modes—Comfort, Sport, Sport +, Individual, and Race—plus a Drift mode that disconnects the front axle and directs the power solely to the rear tires, enabling lurid powerslides suitable only for locations far from public roads. Top speed is electronically limited to a claimed 180 mph.