| Jaguar I-Pace | |
|---|---|
| Overview | |
| Manufacturer | Jaguar Land Rover |
| Production | 2018–2024 |
| Assembly | Austria: Graz (Magna Steyr) |
| Designer | Ian Callum |
| Body and chassis | |
| Class | Executive car[1] |
| Body style | 5-doorhatchback[1][2] |
| Layout | Dual-motor,all-wheel-drive |
| Platform | JLR D7e |
| Powertrain | |
| Electric motor | Permanent magnet synchronous motor x2 200 PS (150 kW) 348 N⋅m (257 lbf⋅ft) (total 400 PS (290 kW) 696 N⋅m (513 lbf⋅ft)) |
| Transmission | 1-speed direct-drive reduction |
| Battery | 90kW·hlithium ion |
| Electric range | EPA: 246 miles (396 km) WLTP: 292 miles (470 km) |
| Plug-in charging |
|
| Dimensions | |
| Wheelbase | 2,990 mm (117.7 in) |
| Length | 4,682 mm (184.3 in) |
| Width |
|
| Height | 1,565 mm (61.6 in) |
| Kerb weight | 2,133 kg (4,702 lb) |
TheJaguar I-Pace (stylised asI-PACE) is abattery-electric car produced byJaguar Land Rover (JLR) under theirJaguar marque. A five-doorexecutive car with ahatchback,[1] the I-Pace was announced in March 2018, with European deliveries beginning in June 2018 and North American deliveries starting in October 2018. The I-Pace was discontinued in 2024 due to slowing sales[3] and a change in corporate vision.[4]

The Jaguar I-Pace was designed byIan Callum.[5] Theconcept version of the car, described as a five-seater sports car, was unveiled by JLR at the2016 Los Angeles Motor Show and shown on-road in London in March 2017.[6][7]
The I-Pace is built by contract manufacturerMagna Steyr inGraz, Austria,[8] and the production version of the I-Pace was revealed in Graz on 1 March 2018.[9] It was subsequently showcased for its first public appearance in its production version at the 2018 Geneva International Motor Show.[10]
Some of the electric drive technology[which?] has come out of theJaguar I-Type electricFormula E racing car programme.[11]
The car has a five-doorhatchback body,[1][2] and is classified as anexecutive car byEuro NCAP and as amedium SUV by theAustralasian New Car Assessment Programme.[1][2]
The Jaguar I-Pace launched with aWLTP-rated range of 292 miles (470 km)[12] and anEPA-rated range of 234 miles (377 km). In December 2019, software enhancements were released to increase range to anEPA-rated range of 246 miles (396 km).[13][14] The car can ford water up to 500 mm (20 in) deep.[15] The rear boot holds 656 litres (23 cu ft),[16] along with 28 litres (1 cu ft) of front boot space. Thedrag coefficient is 0.29.[5]
The car has all-wheel drive via two motors powered by a 90 kWhLG Chem liquid cooled lithium-ion battery.[5] Each motor delivers 197 hp (147 kW) and 258 lb⋅ft (350 N⋅m) of torque, for a total power of 395 hp (295 kW) and total torque of 516 lb⋅ft (700 N⋅m).[5] The 0–62 mph (0–100 km/h) time is 4.8 seconds,[12] and the top speed is electronically limited to 124 mph (200 km/h).[17]
The battery contains 432 pouch cells.[18] It can charge from 0 to 80 per cent in 85 minutes using 50 kW DC charging, or 45 minutes using a 100 kW charger. Home charging with an AC wall box (7 kW) achieves the same state of charge in 10 hours.[17] As the I-Pace was initially released with a single-phase 7 kW AC charger, a one-hour charge, would add around 30 km (19 miles) of range.[19][better source needed] Later 2021 models had 11 kW AC charging, at single-phase or three-phase, depending on market.
The car comes with a smartphone app calledJaguar Remote, which can locate the car, report on its locking, alarming and charging status, and start its battery preconditioning or cabin heating/cooling.[20]

The I-Pace has won 62[21] international awards. In March 2019, it won theEuropean Car of the Year award, the first Jaguar to win the award.[22] In April 2019, it became the 2019World Car of the Year, and won Best Design and Best Green Car awards.[23]
| Organisation | Year | Award | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| World Car Awards | 2019 | World Car of the Year | Won | [24] |
| World Car Design of the Year | Won | |||
| World Green Car | Won | |||
| European Car of the Year | 2019 | Car of the Year | Won | [22] |
| UK Car of the Year | 2019 | Car of the Year | Won | [25] |
| German Car of the Year | 2019 | Car of the Year | Won | [26] |
| Norwegian Car of the Year | 2019 | Car of the Year | Won | [27] |
| China Car of the Year | 2019 | Green Car of the Year | Won | [27] |
| Automobile Journalists of Canada | 2019 | Utility Vehicle of the Year | Won | [28] |
| 2020 | Utility Vehicle of the Year | Won | [29] | |
| South African Guild of Mobility Journalists | 2020 | South African Car of the Year | Won | [30] |
| Top Gear | 2018 | EV of the Year | Won | [31] |
| AUTOBEST | 2018 | Ecobest | Won | [32] |
| MotorWeek | 2019 | Best of the Year | Won | [33] |
In December 2018,[34] the European New Car Assessment Programme (NCAP) awarded the Jaguar I-Pace a 5-star safety rating.
| Test | Points | % |
|---|---|---|
| Overall: | ||
| Adult occupant: | 34.8 | 91% |
| Child occupant: | 40.0 | 81% |
| Pedestrian: | 35.3 | 73% |
| Safety assist: | 10.6 | 81% |
| Test | Points | % |
|---|---|---|
| Overall: | ||
| Adult occupant: | 34.7 | 91% |
| Child occupant: | 39.8 | 81% |
| Pedestrian: | 35.3 | 73% |
| Safety assist: | 10 | 77% |
The Jaguar I-Pace has a race-prepped version called the I-Pace eTrophy, a development of the I-Pace by Jaguar's Special Vehicle Operations.
In September 2017,[37] Jaguar announced their single-make racing series for the I-Pace, calledeTrophy, after the racing car of the same name.
On 24 August 2018,[38] the Jaguar I-Pace set a new EV lap record at theLaguna Seca race circuit in California.
| Year | Europe[39] | United States[40] |
|---|---|---|
| 2018 | 6,490 | 393 |
| 2019 | 12,232 | 2,979 |
| 2020 | 13,444 | 1,546 |
| 2021 | 8,079 | 1,409 |
| 2022 | 6,409 | 439 |
| Total | 46,654 | 6,381 |
These are the total sales in two of its markets; not included are the sales figures in other markets or the thousands sold to Waymo (as detailed below).

In 2018,Waymo selected the Jaguar I-Pace for use in its autonomous ride-hailing service, placing an order for up to 20,000 vehicles.[41] In May 2025 Waymo announced it had 1,500 autonomous vehicles (primarily the I-PACE) in operation in four American cities, and would equip "over 2,000" more I-PACEs with its Waymo Driver hardware.[42]
In June 2020,Jaguar announced its support for a wirelessly chargedtaxi project inOslo,Norway.Jaguar gave 25 I-Pace vehicles to taxi company Cabonline, which will use the vehicles to test the charging infrastructure on taxis in the Norwegian capital.Ralf Speth,JLR's then chief executive, said, "The taxi industry is the ideal test bed for wireless charging, and indeed for high-mileage electric mobility across the board."[dubious –discuss].[43]
Callum and his team
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