Mazda6e Lands in UK This Summer from £38,995 with Half-Price Home Charger Offer
Mazda’s first proper electric saloon, the Mazda6e, lands in UK showrooms this summer with a starting price of £38,995 and a 348-mile WLTP range. Customers who order before 30 June get a Pod Point home charger fitted at half price, dropping the standard £999 wall box to £499 with installation.
The Mazda6e arrives in two trims, Takumi and Takumi Plus, with the higher grade pricing at £39,995. Both use a 78kWh LFP battery and 258ps rear-mounted motor, putting the car into the same conversation as the Tesla Model 3, BYD Seal and Hyundai Ioniq 6. Retail and fleet buyers also receive a £500 public charging credit via the Mazda Public Charging App.
The Spec That Lands in Britain
European Mazda6e buyers got a choice of two batteries when the car launched last autumn, a 68.8kWh LFP and an 80kWh NCM pack. Mazda has simplified the UK offer to a single 78kWh LFP battery, which the brand says combines the best of both worlds: solid range, strong performance and quick charging. The 348-mile combined WLTP figure puts the Mazda6e ahead of the BYD Seal (354 miles in long-range form) on paper and well clear of the entry-level Tesla Model 3 (318 miles).
Charging is the headline here. A 10 to 80 per cent top-up on a 195kW DC charger takes just 24 minutes, which is competitive with the best in this segment. That makes long trips properly viable, and the £500 public charging credit goes a long way to softening the cost of public top-ups during the first months of ownership.

Performance and Driving Experience
The Mazda6e produces 258ps from its rear-mounted electric motor, sending power exclusively to the rear wheels. That brings a 0 to 62mph time of 7.9 seconds and 290Nm of torque, useful real-world numbers that won’t disappoint anyone trading in the petrol Mazda6. The suspension, steering and braking have been recalibrated by Mazda Research Europe in Frankfurt specifically for UK preferences, which Mazda hopes will preserve the Jinba Ittai driver-and-car-as-one feel the brand has built its reputation on.
The car uses a low-roof, short-deck silhouette that’s closer to a coupe than a traditional three-box saloon, with hatchback functionality at the rear for practicality. An electronically extendable rear spoiler doubles as an aero feature at speed. Mazda fits 19-inch aerodynamic wheels with a five-spoke design and flat black inserts to help squeeze extra range from the battery.
Cabin and Tech
Inside, the Mazda6e has a panoramic roof flooding the cabin with light and an interior designed around the Japanese concept of ‘Ma’, a focus on spaciousness and considered emptiness rather than dashboard clutter. Mazda fits a vegan leather alternative across both trims, described as durable, easy to clean and designed for long-term comfort. The Takumi Plus adds upgraded materials and additional kit on top.
Laura Brailey, Mazda UK’s Sales Director, said the Pod Point offer is aimed at first-time EV buyers. “We recognise that many prospective Mazda6e customers may be new to electric vehicles and the simplicity, convenience and the well-established end-to-end installation process associated with this offer is designed to deliver a seamless and stress-free move to electric car ownership.”

The Charger Offer in Detail
The half-price wall box covers a Pod Point Solo 7kW universal home charger, with standard installation included. The promotion runs on retail and Mazda Contract Hire orders placed between 1 April and 30 June 2026, with delivery and registration required by 30 September 2026. A tethered Solo 7kW version (normally £1,049) is also available at the same £499 price point.
Buyers should note that any non-standard installation work picked up during the site survey, such as extra cabling runs or a separate consumer unit, will incur additional charges. For most driveways with a nearby fuse box, that won’t be an issue. The £500 charging credit is redeemable through the Mazda Public Charging App across participating networks, useful for buyers who can’t charge at home or need top-ups on longer journeys.
How it Compares
At £38,995, the Mazda6e undercuts the rear-wheel-drive Tesla Model 3 Long Range (around £43,990) and matches the BYD Seal Comfort almost exactly on price. Against the Hyundai Ioniq 6 (from £41,995), it offers a slight starting-price advantage. The rear-drive layout and 258ps power output put it ahead of the Polestar 2 Long Range Single Motor (272ps) in the same conversation, while the half-price charger offer gives Mazda showrooms a tangible carrot the rivals can’t match this summer.
Whether the Mazda6e succeeds will depend on how it drives, and that’s where Mazda’s UK-specific suspension tune could prove decisive. The brand has earned a reputation for steering and ride that’s a cut above mainstream rivals. If that translates to the electric platform, the Mazda6e could be a properly interesting EV choice rather than just a value play.
When You Can Order
The Mazda6e is in showrooms this summer, with order books already open through retail dealers and Mazda Contract Hire. The Pod Point offer expires on 30 June 2026, and the £500 charging credit applies to both retail and fleet customers. First UK deliveries are expected from late summer onwards.