Cadillac's first serious electric SUV nails the luxury fundamentals, that magnetic suspension delivers genuine float, the interior looks expensive without trying too hard, and Super Cruise makes highway miles feel effortless. Real-world range sits comfortably in the 280-320 mile zone for mixed driving. The problem is charging: 40+ minutes to 80% is standard, not a fluke, and the car tapers hard after 50%. Software gremlins (screen freezes, rain-triggered sensor faults) show up often enough to annoy, though 2024-2025 models are notably more stable than the buggy 2023s. The used market is flooded with low-mileage lease returns at $32k-40k, a legitimate bargain if you can tolerate the quirks. Buy it for serene daily driving and occasional road trips where you're not in a rush. Skip it if you need Tesla-fast charging or can't stomach software hiccups.
The EV6 is a genuinely fun electric crossover with the fastest charging architecture in its class and handling sharp enough to make you forget you're driving a family hauler. The ICCU (Integrated Charging Control Unit) fails often enough to strand 2% of owners unpredictably, and Kia hasn't fixed the root cause, warranty covers the repair, but not the tow truck wait or the loaner lottery at your dealer. Buy it used with heavy depreciation in your favor if you have a solid dealer nearby and can stomach the stranding risk; skip it if you need absolute reliability or hate turning radii the size of a school bus.