2026 Polestar 4 Review: The No-Rear-Window Luxury EV Gamble
A design-led EV that drives brilliantly but demands a major compromise in daily usability.
2026 Polestar 4 fastback coupe-SUV exterior front three-quarter
Price
from ~$78,500
0-100 km/h
7.1 s
DC Charging Peak
200 kW
Power
200 kW (272 hp)
⚡ Quick Verdict
The 2026 Polestar 4 is a seriously quick and stylish piece of kit, starting at around $78,500. Its whole identity is built around ditching the rear window for a digital mirror, which gives it a knockout silhouette but forces you to rethink how you see out of the thing. We reckon the Dual Motor is the pick for its explosive performance, but you absolutely must get behind the wheel first to see if you can live with that view.
✓ The Good
- +Striking, head-turning fastback design with exceptional road presence.
- +Blistering acceleration in dual-motor form (3.8s 0-100km/h).
- +Composed, comfortable ride quality even on rough Australian roads.
- +Clean, minimalist Scandinavian cabin with high-quality MicroTech upholstery.
- +Generous standard equipment including Google Built-in and a 360-degree camera.
✗ The Trade-offs
- −No rear window is a fundamental usability dealbreaker for many drivers.
- −Interior storage is poorly thought out, with undersized cup holders.
- −Cabin can feel dark and claustrophobic for rear-seat passengers.
- −400V architecture lags behind rivals’ 800V systems for peak charging speed.
- −Value proposition is challenged by cheaper, similarly-performing EVs like the Kia EV6.
📑 In This Review
- At a Glance: 2026 Polestar 4 Key Specs
- Design and Exterior: The Coupe-SUV With No Rear Window
- Interior, Tech and Cabin Comfort
- Performance and Driving Impressions
- Range, Charging and Efficiency
- Polestar 4 vs Porsche Macan Electric: Which Is Better?
- Safety and Warranty
- Who Should Buy the 2026 Polestar 4
- Our Verdict
- Frequently Asked Questions
The 2026 Polestar 4 is a seriously quick and stylish piece of kit, starting at around $78,500. Its whole identity is built around ditching the rear window for a digital mirror, which gives it a knockout silhouette but forces you to rethink how you see out of the thing. We reckon the Dual Motor is the pick for its explosive performance, but you absolutely must get behind the wheel first to see if you can live with that view. Right, let’s address the obvious. The 2026 Polestar 4 has ditched the rear window. Gone. It’s a move that’s sparked plenty of debate, and it’s the first thing anyone notices. Polestar reckons this lets them craft a sleeker roofline and points to a future where cameras do the job better than glass. For us drivers, it’s a daily compromise you need to experience firsthand. This isn’t just a quirky design exercise, though. The Polestar 4 is the brand’s flagship SUV, sitting above the Polestar 3. It’s bigger, faster, and more luxurious, gunning straight for the Porsche Macan Electric. It packs serious performance into a clean, Swedish-designed package, all while undercutting its German rival on price. We’ve spent plenty of time with it to see if the bold bet actually pays off.
At a Glance: 2026 Polestar 4 Key Specs
| Specification | Long Range Single Motor | Long Range Dual Motor |
|---|---|---|
| Price (AUD, before on-roads) | from ~$78,500 | from ~$88,500 |
| Power | 200 kW (272 hp) | 400 kW (544 hp) |
| Torque | 343 Nm | 686 Nm (506 lb-ft) |
| 0-100 km/h | 7.1 s | 3.8 s |
| Battery (usable) | 100 kWh | 100 kWh |
| WLTP range | up to 620 km | up to 580 km |
| DC Charging Peak | 200 kW | 200 kW |
| 10-80% DC charge time | ~30 min | ~30 min |
| Drivetrain | RWD | AWD |
| Warranty | 5 yr / unlimited km | 5 yr / unlimited km |
Tesla Model Y Performance
Cheaper, quicker (3.5 s), denser supercharger network — but cabin feels plainer next to the Polestar.
BMW iX2 xDrive30
Sharper handling and a more traditional cabin, but smaller, slower and shorter range than the P4.
Audi Q4 e-tron Sportback
Closest fastback rival on price; Audi badge appeal and Quattro option, but lower output and slower charging.
Here’s a breakdown of the two core powertrain options available for the Australian market. Long Range Single Motor — from ~$78,500 200 kW (272 hp) 343 Nm 7.1 s 100 kWh up to 620 km 200 kW ~30 min RWD 5 yr / unlimited km
Design and Exterior: The Coupe-SUV With No Rear Window
The look is the main event. The Polestar 4 has a fastback shape that sweeps down dramatically from the roof to its short tail. It gives off serious sports car vibes, not your typical boxy SUV. Everything is flush and smooth, from the door handles to the full-width rear light bar, which all helps with the aero.
And then there’s the missing rear window. This is what lets Polestar achieve that plunging roofline. They say it also improves headroom in the back and makes the car more slippery through the air. In its place, a roof-mounted camera sends a live feed to a digital mirror inside. Our test car, painted in the now-retired ‘Nordic Gold’—a vivid, orangey-gold—was a proper head-turner, getting looks everywhere we went.
There’s no denying the design works on a street-impact level. But that lack of glass is a constant talking point. The view over your shoulder is gone, replaced entirely by a screen. It’s a mental switch you have to make, and we can tell you right now, not everyone will be comfortable with it.
Interior, Tech and Cabin Comfort
Inside, it’s classic Scandinavian minimalism. The dashboard is clean, dominated by a 10.2-inch driver’s screen and a big 15.4-inch centre touchscreen running Google Built-in. You get Maps, Assistant, and the Play Store built right in. Wireless Apple CarPlay, a phone charger, and a 360-degree camera with a 3D view are all standard. The base eight-speaker audio is fine, but our car had the optional 14-speaker Harman Kardon setup, which sounded brilliant.
The seats, clad in Polestar’s MicroTech material, are supportive and comfy. The driver gets 8-way power adjustment with memory. The fixed glass roof lets plenty of light into the front, but it’s a different story in the back. Without a window, the rear seat area can feel quite dark and closed-in, especially with our car’s black headliner. The floating centre console has a handy volume knob, but the storage around it is a miss. The cup holders are too small and cramped, and there’s only one wireless charging pad.
Boot space is a useful 526 litres, expanding to 1,536 litres with the back seats down. There’s also a small 15-litre frunk for your charging cables. While the materials feel premium and it’s well put together, some controls are odd. Having to use the touchscreen to adjust the steering wheel and mirrors feels like change for change’s sake.
Performance and Driving Impressions
This is a big part of the appeal. The dual-motor, all-wheel drive model delivers a hefty 400kW and 686Nm, hitting 100km/h from a standstill in a claimed 3.8 seconds. The single-motor rear-driver still has 200kW and gets to 100 in 7.1 seconds. In our testing, the dual-motor’s shove was immense and immediate—that classic, linear EV punch that throws you back in your seat.
The chassis feels sorted, especially with the optional Performance Pack which adds Brembo brakes and a tuned suspension. It uses active dampers with coil springs, and on our drive over mixed surfaces, the ride stayed composed and comfortable, ironing out bumps nicely. You can pick from three steering and three suspension modes. The one-pedal driving is well-judged and can bring you to a complete halt.
Once you get used to the startling speed and the smooth ride, a bit of familiarity creeps in. Underneath the provocative styling and big power numbers, the driving feel isn’t a million miles away from other polished premium EVs. The steering is accurate but doesn’t give you loads of feedback, and the overall vibe is more about rapid, effortless travel than a raw, engaging drive.
Range, Charging and Efficiency
Both versions use a 100 kWh battery. The single-motor claims up to 620km on the WLTP cycle, the dual-motor up to 580km. In our real-world driving, a mix of city and open-road work, we found the dual-motor could realistically deliver around 450-500km, depending on how you drive and the weather.
DC fast charging maxes out at 200kW, which gets you from 10 to 80 percent in about 30 minutes. That’s competitive, but it’s not as quick as the 270kW-plus you get from rivals with 800-volt systems, like the Porsche Macan Electric or Hyundai Ioniq 5. The 11kW AC onboard charger means a full home top-up takes roughly 11 hours. A heat pump is standard, which helps efficiency when it’s cold. For towing, the single-motor is rated for 900kg, and the dual-motor can handle 1,588kg.
Polestar 4 vs Porsche Macan Electric: Which Is Better?
This is the comparison Polestar wants you to make. The price gap is huge. Our dual-motor test car, with a few options, was about $95,000. A base Porsche Macan 4 Electric kicks off at around $134,400. That’s over $40k more before you even look at the Porsche options list.
In a straight line, the Polestar 4 Dual Motor (3.8s) actually beats the Macan 4 (5.2s) and runs toe-to-toe with the much pricier Macan Turbo (3.3s). The Porsche fights back with its 800-volt tech, giving a higher peak charge rate of 270kW compared to 200kW, and better charging consistency. Range is pretty similar on paper.
The cabins are worlds apart. The Polestar is all about calm minimalism—nearly everything is on the central screen. The Porsche, while also screen-heavy, keeps more physical buttons for key functions and has a more technical, cockpit-like feel. On a twisting road, the Macan Electric still has the dynamic edge. Its steering is sharper, and the chassis feels more agile and connected—it’s in Porsche’s DNA. The Macan also carries a badge that still holds serious weight on the used car market.
| Specification | 2026 Polestar 4 Dual Motor | 2026 Porsche Macan 4 Electric |
|---|---|---|
| Starting price (AUD est) | ~$88,500 | ~$134,400 |
| Power | 400 kW (544 hp) | 300 kW (408 hp) |
| 0-100 km/h | 3.8 s | 5.2 s |
| Battery (usable) | 100 kWh | 95 kWh |
| WLTP range | up to 580 km | up to 613 km |
| Electrical architecture | 400 V | 800 V |
| DC peak charging | 200 kW | 270 kW |
| Boot space (rear / total) | 526 / 1,536 L | 540 / 1,348 L |
| Warranty | 5 yr / unlimited km | 3 yr / unlimited km |
Which one is better?
Buy the Polestar 4 if you want a striking, design-first electric coupe-SUV with serious dual-motor performance, a calmer minimalist cabin and a price that comfortably undercuts the Porsche before options.
Buy the Porsche Macan Electric if you want the sharpest steering in this segment, the faster 800-volt charging network experience and a badge that still moves the residual-value needle.
Our pick for most Australian buyers is the Polestar 4 Dual Motor with the Plus Pack — it gets you 80 percent of the Macan experience for substantially less, with a more distinctive design.
Safety and Warranty
The Polestar 4 has earned a top 5-star ANCAP safety rating under the 2024 protocols. It scored 92% for Adult Occupant Protection and 87% for Child Occupant Protection. Its safety assist systems, which include AEB with car, cyclist, and pedestrian detection, lane support, and speed assistance, were rated at 79%.
Standard safety kit includes a centre airbag for side impacts. The full suite of driver aids gives you a solid safety net. In Australia, you get a 5-year, unlimited-kilometre vehicle warranty. The battery has its own 8-year, 160,000km warranty, with a promise to replace it for free if its health drops below 70% within that time. Servicing is condition-based, so there’s no fixed schedule.
Who Should Buy the 2026 Polestar 4
✓ Buy the 2026 Polestar 4 if
you love its fastback silhouette, want Scandinavian-cool design over driver-engagement, and value Polestar minimalist tech approach. The dual-motor model is genuinely quick, the ride is composed, and pricing undercuts the equivalent Porsche by a clear margin.
✗ Skip the 2026 Polestar 4 if
you regularly haul tall passengers or rely on a true rear window for parking and overtaking confidence. The digital-mirror-only setup is a dealbreaker for some drivers, and rivals like the Kia EV6 or Tesla Model Y deliver similar performance for less money.
The ideal buyer here is someone who cares deeply about design and tech. They prefer a unique, minimalist look and a quiet cabin over traditional ergonomics or a big German badge. They want instant performance and a comfy ride for the daily grind and weekend escapes. This person is okay with adapting to a camera-based view if it means driving something that looks like nothing else on the road.
⚡ Our Verdict
A design-led EV that drives brilliantly but demands a major compromise in daily usability.
The 2026 Polestar 4 is a car of big contradictions. It’s stunningly beautiful and ridiculously fast, with a ride that belies its performance with impressive comfort. The build quality and materials feel properly premium, and the tech integration is slick. You have to applaud it for being different in a sea of sameness. But that difference comes at a real cost. The missing rear window isn’t just a gimmick; it’s a daily compromise that impacts how airy the cabin feels and how you see the world around you. And while it massively undercuts the Porsche Macan Electric on price, it has a tougher fight on its hands against brilliant, cheaper rivals like the Kia EV6 GT or even the Tesla Model Y Performance. We give the Polestar 4 a 3.7 out of 5. It’s a top-tier, characterful EV that will be perfect for a specific buyer—someone who values its unique design above all else and is willing to adapt to its quirks. For everyone else, a test drive isn’t just a good idea; it’s a must-do to understand if you can live with its most talked-about feature. If you can, a striking and rapid companion awaits.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does the 2026 Polestar 4 cost in Australia?
The 2026 Polestar 4 kicks off at about $78,500 before on-roads for the Long Range Single Motor. The Long Range Dual Motor, with all-wheel drive and a lot more grunt, starts at roughly $88,500. Adding option packs like the Plus or Performance Pack will bump that final price up.
Does the 2026 Polestar 4 really have no rear window?
Yep, that’s right. There’s no physical rear window at all. Instead, a high-def camera at the back of the roof streams a live picture to a digital mirror on the inside. Polestar says this design choice lets them create a more dramatic, coupe-like roofline and helps with aerodynamics.
What is the 2026 Polestar 4 range and charging speed?
The Long Range Single Motor has a WLTP range of up to 620km. The Dual Motor is rated for up to 580km. Both use a 100kWh battery. On a DC fast charger, it peaks at 200kW, getting you from 10 to 80 percent in around 30 minutes. Plug it into a standard 11kW AC home charger, and you’re looking at about 11 hours for a full charge.
Is the Polestar 4 made in China or South Korea?
For our market and North America, production of the Polestar 4 has shifted to South Korea. This move helps avoid the massive tariffs on Chinese-made EVs in other markets. The cars we get in Australia also come from that South Korean factory.
How does the Polestar 4 compare to the Porsche Macan Electric?
The Polestar 4 is cheaper and more distinctive, offering straight-line speed that matches or beats the Porsche for a lot less cash. The Porsche Macan Electric counters with sharper handling, better steering feel, and faster peak charging thanks to its 800-volt system. Both have 5-star ANCAP safety ratings. We’ve broken it down in detail in the comparison section above.
Does the 2026 Polestar 4 qualify for any Australian EV incentives?
The single-motor model, with its base price under the Luxury Car Tax threshold for efficient vehicles, should be eligible for some benefits. This can include an FBT exemption under a novated lease, which makes it an attractive proposition for some buyers. Whether the dual-motor qualifies will depend on its final, on-road price.
What is the warranty on the 2026 Polestar 4 in Australia?
Polestar provides a 5-year, unlimited-kilometre warranty on the car itself. The battery is covered separately for 8 years or 160,000km. That battery warranty includes a guarantee to fix or replace it for free if its capacity drops below 70% within that period.






