in

Tested: 2025 Polestar 3 Nails the Dynamics but Not the Ergonomics

Congratulations! You’ve just purchased a new 2025 Polestar 3. You grab the keys from the salesperson, hop into the cabin, start it, and—what the hell is this? The whole steering wheel is blank! Everything else lights up, but the wide swath of buttons on the tiller stays dark as night. Is it broken? Do you have to solve a series of riddles first? Your window sticker did have a line item for the bridge-troll toll, so it can’t be that.

Not every car spoon-feeds you the driving experience in the way you’re used to. It’s not necessarily a surprise that Polestar does things a little differently—after all, the new Polestar 4 doesn’t even have a rear windshield—but doing things differently doesn’t also mean doing them well. That’s the thing about the Polestar 3: It nails the basics, but when you start diving into the minutiae, some parts of this compact electric SUV will clearly take some getting used to.

Then again, even a quick glance at the exterior is all it takes to know the Polestar 3 isn’t always following the beaten path. The whole shebang gives off more of a tall-wagon vibe in person than a proper SUV, but Polestar’s traditional Volvo-adjacent lighting keeps the car vaguely rooted in familiarity.

HIGHS: A blast in any weather, clever design, competitively priced.

And for all the awkward bits we’ll get to in a bit, the 3’s cabin does succeed in its luxurious-minimalist appeal. We love the utilization of multiple interesting textiles across various touch points, though the carbon-footprint data printed on the $5500 nappa leather seats might lean too hard into the greenwashing. Otherwise, the cabin is well lit from all sides and felt sufficiently spacious. We don’t love the size of the tiny armrest cubby, but the expansive tray underneath makes up for it.

Our Polestar 3 test car was the Launch Edition, which included all three of its major packages. The Pilot package adds additional driver aids, while the Plus pack piles on the luxury with a Bowers & Wilkins sound system, but we’re most interested in the Performance pack. A standard dual-motor Polestar 3 produces 483 horsepower and 620 pound-feet of torque, but Performance models bump that up to 510 horses and 671 twisties, in addition to adding sportier chassis tuning and a whole lot of gold, including the seatbelts.

LOWS: Some infuriating controls, nannies out the wazoo, iffy rear visibility.

That’s more than enough motive force for this sled. At the test track, our Polestar 3 made its way to 60 mph in 3.9 seconds—0.3 second quicker than the last Mercedes-Benz EQE 500 SUV we tested and dead even with the Porsche Cayenne S Coupe. The Polestar also bested the EQE in the quarter-mile by 0.3 second and 2 mph, running 12.5 at 109 mph.

Despite the Polestar weighing 30 pounds more than the EQE, the former’s brakes were certainly hungrier for friction; the 3 only needed 152 feet to stop from 70 mph, while the EQE 500 SUV required 182. The gulf widens further at 100 mph, where the Polestar required just 307 feet, while the Merc asked for 374. In addition to its zero-to-60 dead heat with the 3, the Cayenne is even-steven with the Polestar in braking from 70 mph (and oh so close from 100 mph at 310 feet)—which is wild when you consider the Porsche is almost 600 pounds lighter.

Polestar has said many times that the Cayenne is the 3’s natural dynamic target, and whaddya know, it’s pretty darn close. Sure, the Swede’s 0.92-g skidpad effort is 0.11 g below the Porsche’s, but lateral grip isn’t everything. The 3 rides on a pretty normcore combination of adaptive dampers and dual-chamber air springs. The suspension did a great job of waving away the Polestar’s mass, and the scales belied how light the 3 really felt whether we were chucking it into a mostly dry corner or around an abandoned (read: unplowed) Walmart parking lot. Unwanted pitching or rolling was hard to find, but the 3 never rode so stiff that we felt uncomfortable. Polestar found a lovely line to thread between comfort and poise. The only thing we truly didn’t like about the driving experience was mediocre sightlines to the back and the sides.

There are some parts of the Polestar 3’s cabin tech that work well—the infotainment software is Polestar’s (hell, Sweden’s) best iteration yet, with a pleasant color scheme and vehicle settings that include graphic complements to better show what the setting actually changes. The tiny little display behind the steering wheel is nice, and certainly preferable to looking farther away from the road for some centrally mounted display, like you’re back in a Saturn Ion.

And then there’s the steering wheel and most of what’s near to it. All those blank buttons? That’s by design—you must lightly hover your finger on a button before the gauge display will tell you what it does, if anything. Sometimes, the buttons simply have no function. Most of it’s related to the cruise control, which is engaged by . . . shifting into Drive for a second time, which in other cars usually hides a brake-regen function. Need to cancel? Shift into Drive again. Need to resume? Shift into Drive twice—but not too slowly, or else it won’t count. If you also own a non-Polestar vehicle, it’s sort of like learning a second language, which can be less than ideal if you bounce between cars often.

Oh yeah, and there’s only two window switches for four windows on the driver’s door panel. Thank you, Volkswagen, for creating a monster that we may never be able to kill. This car costs damn near $100,000; we think they can afford four window switches there.

VERDICT: A solid-value performer if you can get past some of the quirks.

Price is the final arena where the Polestar competes to win. Our Launch Edition, which includes the Performance pack’s power boost, starts at $86,300, with our tester ringing in at $93,100 with a couple extra options. A base Mercedes EQE 500 SUV demands $90,650 before a single option box is ticked; if you want an EQE SUV that outperforms the Polestar 3, you have to step up to the $110,750 AMG variant. The Porsche Cayenne S is also quite dear, starting at $103,595. Skip the Launch Edition model and you can get a Perf-pack 3 for just $81,300.

Not only is the Polestar 3 approaching the performance chops of its intended target, but it’s doing so at a major discount too. It may not have the badge panache of Mercedes-Benz or Porsche, but the 2025 Polestar 3 is definitely worth checking out, provided the steering wheel doesn’t trip you up.

Specifications

Specifications

2025 Polestar 3 Performance Launch Edition
Vehicle Type: front- and rear-motor, all-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 4-door wagon

PRICE

Base/As Tested: $86,300/$93,100
Options: Nappa leather seating surfaces (nappa leather, front massaging seats w/ ventilation and power side support, Bowers & Wilkins front headrest speakers, black ash wooden deco panels), $5500; metallic paint, $1300

POWERTRAIN

Front Motor: permanent-magnet AC, 241 hp, 310 lb-ft
Rear Motor: permanent-magnet AC, 268 hp, 361 lb-ft
Combined Power: 510 hp
Combined Torque: 671 lb-ft
Battery Pack: liquid-cooled lithium-ion, 107.0 kWh
Onboard Charger: 11.0 kW
Peak DC Fast-Charge Rate: 250 kW
Transmissions, F/R: direct-drive

CHASSIS

Suspension, F/R: control arms/multilink
Brakes, F/R: 15.7-in vented disc/15.4-in vented disc
Tires: Pirelli P Zero Elect PZ4
F: 265/40R-22 106V XL POL
R: 295/35R-22 108V XL POL

DIMENSIONS

Wheelbase: 117.5 in
Length: 192.9 in
Width: 77.5 in
Height: 63.5 in
Passenger Volume, F/R: 58/48 ft3
Cargo Volume, Behind F/R: 47/18 ft3
Front Trunk Volume: 1 ft3
Curb Weight: 5700 lb

C/D TEST RESULTS

60 mph: 3.9 sec
100 mph: 10.2 sec
1/4-Mile: 12.5 sec @ 109 mph
130 mph: 21.7 sec
Results above omit 1-ft rollout of 0.3 sec.
Rolling Start, 5–60 mph: 4.1 sec
Top Gear, 30–50 mph: 2.5 sec
Top Gear, 50–70 mph: 3.1 sec
Top Speed (gov ltd): 132 mph
Braking, 70–0 mph: 152 ft
Braking, 100–0 mph: 307 ft
Roadholding, 300-ft Skidpad: 0.92 g 

EPA FUEL ECONOMY

Combined/City/Highway: 77/81/73 MPGe
Range: 279 mi

C/D TESTING EXPLAINED

Cars are Andrew Krok’s jam, along with boysenberry. After graduating with a degree in English from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2009, Andrew cut his teeth writing freelance magazine features, and now he has a decade of full-time review experience under his belt. A Chicagoan by birth, he has been a Detroit resident since 2015. Maybe one day he’ll do something about that half-finished engineering degree.


Source: Reviews - aranddriver.com

Hero Xpulse 210 Factory Rally Bike Debuts

Next-Gen 2026 Nissan Sentra Spied with Murano-Inspired Styling