VW ID.Buzz Electric Microbus Revealed, Coming to U.S. in 2024
The 2024 VW ID.Buzz, the modern incarnation of the classic Volkswagen Bus, is faithful to Volkswagen's classic vans of the Sixties and Seventies in appearance, while utterly modern under its capacious shell.
The ID.Buzz is built on VW's modular MEB platform and appears spacious and airy inside, while it's only 0.4 inch less tall than the Cadillac Escalade.
U.S. buyers will have to wait for the 2024 model year to get the Buzz, and when they do, it will be a longer-wheelbase model with three rows of seats.
We have been waiting for this moment since the Vanagon retired, but after more than 30 years, and many unfulfilled hints at an earlier return, Volkswagen is finally bringing back its iconic Microbus as an all-new EV. These are the first official images of the production ID.Buzz.
Beyond the lack of a psychedelic disguise, much is obviously similar to the prototype version of the bus's cargo sister that we drove in Europe last month. Sitting on the same MEB platform that underpins the ID.4 and Audi Q4 e-tron has allowed Volkswagen's designers much freer rein than they would if they needed to require a tall, bulky combustion powerplant. Like its EV sisters, the Buzz's battery pack is mounted beneath its floor, with an impressive percentage of its 185.5-inch overall length converted into usable interior space while still meeting modern impact safety standards on both sides of the Atlantic. (Crashworthiness was not exactly a strength of its air-cooled predecessors.)
The ID.Buzz you see here is the European-spec version, sitting on a 117.6-inch wheelbase. Volkswagen says this one won't be coming to the U.S. All American versions will be sitting on a slightly longer extended wheelbase and offering three-row seating. (Interestingly, in Europe there will be a three-row option for the standard-wheelbase van in 2-2-2 configuration.) At 78.1 inches in width, the ID.Buzz is nearly six inches farther across than a T.3 Vanagon, while its 76.3-inch height makes it just a third of an inch less tall than a Cadillac Escalade.
There are other differences between the car you see here and the U.S. version beneath the skin. The regular-wheelbase ID.Buzz gets an 82.0-kWh battery pack, 77.0 kWh of which is usable, which will drive a 201-hp electric motor that powers the rear axle. C/D has been told that the U.S.-market version will have a larger battery pack, although we don't have a capacity figure yet, and also that there will be the option of an all-wheel-driven ID.Buzz which will use a second electric front motor.
While there is no official figure on the total power output of that version, the talk within Volkswagen is that we can expect it to make at least as much as the 295-hp all-wheel-drive ID.4. Volkswagen hasn't announced a range figure in Europe, although engineers told us when we drove the prototype that the company hopes for a 250-mile WLTP rating. We're anticipating the U.S. version's larger battery will allow a similar figure under the more stringent EPA system.
American Buzz buyers will also miss the innovative option of vehicle-to-home charging that Volkswagen is planning for Europe, allowing the minibus to act as what is basically a power bank when connected to a compatible two-way wallbox. In this way, owners will be able to benefit from cheaper off-peak electricity tariffs for domestic use as well as vehicle charging. But our ID.Buzz will get the plug-and-charge technology that Volkswagen is soon to roll out across its EVs, which lets the Buzz be recognized by a charging station as soon as it is plugged in. This means there'll be no need to fiddle with cards or apps to unlock the charger. It will support DC fast charging at rates of up to 170 kW.
As the ID.Buzz prototype we drove had a heavily disguised interior, this is our first chance to see the finished cabin. It looks large, light, and airy thanks to both a sizable glasshouse and a multitude of storage compartments and oddment spaces, which will include a movable and removable center console between the front seats. Top-spec cars will be available with luxury features rarely offered on vans, even ones wearing windows, such as power-operated seats featuring a massage function and adjustable ambient lighting. There will be 10 standard colors, and 30 with an optional extended palette. Digital instruments are standard; the European ID.Buzz gets either 10-inch or 12-inch touchscreen displays, depending on trim level. We hope that VW fits a smarter UI system than the dull-witted one currently offered on the ID.4.
The new ID.Buzz is set to be produced in the Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles plant in Hannover, Germany, where both passenger and (Euro market) cargo versions will be built alongside each other. European sales will begin in the third quarter of this year, but we'll have to wait a while longer: the North American sales launch won't be until 2024.
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