What's the difference?
What makes the Aston Martin Vanquish a luxury car? Everything.
Its over-the-top performance and opulence makes its very existence the definition of a luxury car. Nobody on the planet has any need for this car, you only buy the Vanquish because you want it - and that makes it one of the most luxurious vehicles on sale today.
Its very existence is tied directly to what’s under the bonnet, the last V12 remaining in Aston Martin’s showroom, and the fact that some customers can simply not bring themselves to drive anything without 12 cylinders.
So, what’s it like driving the apex of luxury? Read on to find out…
Imagine jumping in the time machine, zapping back to the late 1970s and bringing the team that produced the original Mercedes-Benz G-Wagen into 2025 and showing them where their creation has landed close to half a century later.
They’d be amazed a vehicle looking so much like their military-focused, first-generation model even existed! And once they’d absorbed that incredible fact they’d be stunned to see what lurks under its familiar bodywork.
Because this is the most recent iteration of what’s now referred to as the G-Glass, the pure-electric G580 featuring four individually controlled electric motors - one at each wheel - collectively producing enough energy to power a small town.
Stay with us as we explore this take-no-prisoners EV 4WD that has multiple show-stopping, high-tech party tricks lurking up its sleeve.
The definition of luxury is having something you want, rather than something you need. And the Vanquish is definitely something you donât need, but will desperately want once youâve experienced it. Itâs opulence on wheels, the kind of car you buy mostly because you can. Because owning a V8-powered Aston Martin wouldnât cut it in your circle of friends. Or because you just want the very best things in life, cost be damned.
As per the 1979 original, the current G-Class is produced by Magna Steyr in Arnieâs home town of Graz in Austria. And many fundamental things havenât changed since then. But clearly this EV monsterâs exotic electric powertrain is a huge departure.
It retains impressive off-road ability and straight-line speed. But will it hit the mark with top-end luxury 4WDers? Short story, this thing is wild, and it will be irresistible for a likely narrow band of tech-focused âmust have the latest and greatestâ buyers. Nothing like impressing friends and family with a tank turn.
Note: CarsGuide attended this event as a guest of the manufacturer, with travel, accommodation and meals provided.
While the engine is the unique heart of the Vanquish, the design is the first element that grabs your attention. Even for a brand renowned for its GT cars with imposingly long bonnets, the Vanquish stands out.
Thatâs because the designers deliberately added 80mm of space between the front axle and the A-pillar (the front windscreen pillar) to elongate the bonnet even more for what it calls a ârakish and indulgentâ profile.Â
The lines flow across the length of the Vanquish, from its trademark grille to its Kamm Tail, giving it a look that is somehow simultaneously classically Aston Martin - with elements of its multiple generations of GT cars - while also being contemporary.Â
Some of the modern touches are derived from Formula One, as the brand looks to leverage its racing team, with bonnet louvres to help cool the engine without unsettling the air-flow too much.
Aston Martinâs Chief Creative Officer Marek Reichman calls the Vanquish âan iconic halo modelâ and explained the design was deliberately pushing âbeyond the expected, rational, and thoughtful.â Which sums up this dramatic piece of automotive art quite nicely.
Okay, so Mercedes-Benz says, with a straight face, that âwith the aim of optimising the vehicleâs aerodynamicsâ classic G-Class elements have been revised, including the reprofiled bonnet, âair curtainâ vents in the flares over the rear wheel arches, A-pillar cladding and the small spoiler on the edge of the roof.
At the same time, the 20-inch wheels are also claimed to be "aerodynamically optimisedâ and underneath, a 26mm underbody casing made from a mix of materials, including carbon-fibre (attached to the ladder frame with more than 50 steel screws), protects the battery from dust, dirt and rocks.
In ticking off the Edition One, car-spotters should look for black rims with blue brake callipers behind them, blue inserts in the exterior protective strips as well as black door handles and a new rectangular design box on the rear door for storing items such as charging cables, tools or snow chains. If you want a spare wheel, choose the standard model.
An optional black-panel radiator grille ($3800) features tinted lighting units as well as an animated LED light band and chrome surround. The light band can be activated as a running light or an animation when locking and unlocking the vehicle.
And itâs worth noting Mercedes-Benz and the carâs contracted manufacturer, Magna Steyr, have invested much time and many Euros in retaining the carâs classic handle and door lock design. G-Wagen owners will recognise its sound from several kilometres away.
Inside the G580 itâs clear this is one area where the G-Class has progressed enormously over the decades. Itâs still quite upright in terms of the dash design, but youâre confronted by twin 12.3-inch screens, supporting the Mercedes-Benz user interface.Â
All very high-tech, but thatâs balanced by an old-school grab-handle for the front passenger to latch onto during off-road work.Â
The signature turbine-style air vents are located within squared-off panels, and in the limited Edition One you have a blue fleck running through carbon-fibre inserts on the centre console, door cards and that front grab handle. In the standard car itâs a (very attractive) walnut open-pore wood rather than carbon.
A luxurious interior for sure.
Despite measuring nearly five metres long, the Vanquish is a surprisingly small car from a practicality perspective. Because the added wheelbase is ahead of the cabin, it remains strictly a two-seater, with no room for rear passengers.
Thereâs limited small item storage, too, aside from a couple of cupholders and a lidded console box. Although, on the plus side, the lack of rear seats creates room for some small shelves in case you need to store some loose items. Â
It also has a surprisingly small 248-litre boot, which means limited storage for anything, including luggage, for a road trip in what would otherwise be a great road trip car.
As for the multimedia system, while not at the cutting edge (although Aston Martin will debut Apple CarPlay Ultra in its DBX model) the system works well for this type of car.
Itâs unlikely too many under 25s will be grabbing this $700K luxury GT, so the fact the media system has a touchscreen and an array of physical buttons is a welcome detail.
As for the 1170-watt, 15-speaker Bowers & Wilkins sound system, it performs incredibly well, as you would probably expect. Like the car it has loads of power but excellent attention-to-detail with fantastic clarity, too.
For the record, the G63 is just over 4.6m long and a little more than 1.9m wide with a 2890mm wheelbase. So, not huge, but its close to 2.0m height is hard to ignore.Â
In the front thereâs lots of breathing space, and in terms of storage you have generous bins in the doors with plenty of room for big bottles. Then thereâs a centre armrest, which doubles as the top of a deep storage box housing a USB-C port inside.Â
A sliding roller cover in the centre console reveals two cupholders, another two USB-C sockets, a 12-volt outlet and a wireless charging pad. Add in a big glove box and youâve got plenty of options in terms of storage, power and connectivity.Â
In the back, sitting behind the driverâs seat set for my 183cm position Iâve got tons of foot and legroom and, no surprise, lots of headroom.
Thereâs a fair bit of sculpting in the rear seat, which is as nice as it is unusual (makers often avoid bolsters on the rear seat as it makes the backrest harder to fold flat). And in terms of three-abreast accommodation, a smaller adult will be okay in the centre spot for shorter journeys. Three up to mid-teenage kids will be swimming in it.
Then, for practicality you again have generous bins in the doors. And if you need even more capacity, fold down the centre armrest which houses two different size cupholders.Â
In the rear of the centre console youâve got two USB-Cs, a 12-volt power outlet, individual climate control and directional vents.
There are map rockets on the front seatbacks and more air vents in the B-pillar. So, when it comes to comfort, powering up devices and storing âthingsâ youâre well taken care of.
The side-opening tailgate door opens from right to left, which isnât ideal when parallel parked on the left hand side of the road, but boot volume is over 600 litres (VDA) with all seats upright, expanding to nearly 2000 litres with the 60/40 split-folding rear seat lowered.
There are multiple tie-down hooks, a netted pocket, two lights, a 12-volt outlet as well as a âski-portâ door and sliding cargo cover to enhance practicality and security.
As mentioned earlier, the full-size spare in the standard model, but the Design Box replaces it on the Edition One, although Mercedes-Benz says itâs aiming to make a spare available as an option later in the year.
The Vanquish sits at the top of the range for now, at least until the new Valhalla supercar arrives in Australia, and has an eye-watering starting price of $737,000.
Not only does that not include on-road costs, which will likely push the price closer to seven-figures, thereâs also the plethora of options and customisation you can choose from that will add to the amount you pay.
Not that the standard specification is bad. For $700K you do get 21-inch alloy wheels, carbon ceramic brakes, 16-way adjustable sports seats, keyless ignition, a 10.2-inch touchscreen multimedia display, Apple CarPlay, Bluetooth, wireless phone charging and a 1170-watt 15-speaker Bowers & Wilkins sound system.
Of course, on top of all that you get a bespoke chassis and a unique twin-turbo V12 engine, that puts the Vanquish in the same class as the Ferrari 12Cilindri, which starts at $803,500 - making the Aston Martin look competitive.Â
The new Mercedes-Benz G580 is priced at $249,900 and a more highly-specified limited Edition One version comes in at $299,900, both before on-road costs.
Thatâs a price territory where the BMW X5 and X6 M Competition ($244,900 & $250,900) as well as the Range Rover Autobiography ($233,961) live. Not to mention competition from the G580âs still available and appreciably pricier twin-turbo V8 Mercedes-AMG G63 stablemate ($365,900).
As youâd expect, the standard features list is substantial and the highlights are Burmester 3D Surround Sound audio (with digital radio), leather upholstery, keyless entry and start, a multi-function steering wheel trimmed in Nappa leather, power front seats with memory function, heated and cooled cupholders, and wireless smartphone charging.Â
Thereâs also dual 12.3-inch driver instrument and central media displays, ambient lighting and adaptive LED headlights as well as Android Auto and Apple CarPlay.
As well as cosmetic changes, covered shortly, the Edition One steps up to âSilver Pearlâ and black Nappa leather trim (with blue contrast stitching).
Thereâs also a range of optional packages bundling up everything from exterior body elements to interior trim and additional multimedia, the latter especially for back-seaters.Â
The âNight Packageâ ($4300) includes black exterior mirror housings, black running boards and wheels as well as darkened exterior lights and a radiator shell that can be illuminated for an impressive profile while driving.
A âSuperior Line Interior Plus Packageâ ($14,500) brings full Nappa leather upholstery, âActive Multicontour Seat Package Plusâ and grab handles in leather. Then a âManufaktur Exterior Packageâ ($4100) finishes the roof, bumpers and wheel arches in âObsidian Blackâ.Â
But the one that will score you maximum brownie points with the kids is the âInterior Comfort Packageâ ($8500), featuring a rear seat entertainment system, including two integrated 11.6-inch touch displays.
The engine is undoubtedly the star attraction of the Vanquish, with the twin-turbo 5.2-litre V12 being the last of its kind in the British brandâs line-up now that the DB12 has switched to an AMG-sourced twin-turbo V8.Â
While that engine is arguably better with its excellent performance, smaller dimensions and lighter weight, the fact remains that for many of Aston Martinâs long-time buyers, itâs V12 or nothing.
It also helps that the V12 produces an extremely potent 614kW and 1000Nm, which is way ahead of the 611kW/678Nm the Ferrari 12Cilindri makes. So you get bragging rights at the golf club with your Ferrari mates.
The engine features a unique titanium exhaust and is paired with an eight-speed automatic transaxle that drives the rear wheels.
That is enough to propel the Vanquish to a top speed of 345km/h, making it the fastest production car the brand has ever produced, with a 3.3 second 0-100km/h time.
The G580 is powered by four permanently excited synchronous motors, each delivering around a CLA200âs worth of power and torque to each wheel for overall outputs in excess of 432kW/1164Nm.
Each motor has its own two-stage transmission and power electronics for almost infinite fine-tuning of the direction and amount of drive sent to individual wheels. Merc calls it âindividual-wheel driveâ.
To say the Vanquish isnât the most fuel frugal vehicle on the market is an obvious statement, but even its claimed 13.7L/100km is best described as optimistic.
Thatâs not surprising given its size and performance, but with an 82-litre fuel tank thatâs a driving range of less than 600km, at best.
In the real world, during our time in the Vanquish, the carâs trip computer was indicating that we stayed in the high teens; although that featured limited freeway/extra-urban driving.
Housed in a torsion-resistant casing and embedded low down in its ladder-frame chassis, the G580âs 116kWh two-tier, liquid-cooled lithium-ion battery pack delivers a WLTP-rated range of 473km, or 567km on the more lenient NEDC scale.
âEco Assistantâ and âRange Monitoringâ functions provide continuous information on battery status, energy consumption and estimated range.
Maximum system capacity is 400 volts which enables 200kW DC charging, meaning a 10 to 80 per cent fill in as little as 32 minutes. Maximum AC charging capacity is 11kW.
Claimed energy use is 23.1kWh/100km, and we saw an average of 28.6kWh across urban and highway running on the launch drive program.
Not exactly a âgreenâ EV choice, then, but itâs worth noting a one-year Chargefox subscription is included to off-set the carâs energy appetite.
As cars go, few can match what the Vanquish offers. Even in my 20+ years of driving every type of car imaginable, the Vanquish stands out as being something distinct, bold and special.
Sitting behind the wheel, the bonnet looks like it stretches out to the horizon and you feel like youâre sitting on the back axle of the car. And yet, when you start driving, the Vanquish feels like it shrinks around you.
At normal speeds it feels like a classic grand tourer, relaxed, refined and easy to drive. Obviously it's a firmer ride than your average luxury car, but thatâs a small price to pay for the breadth of capability this car offers.Â
Because once you get out of the urban environment, the Vanquish becomes something else entirely. On a winding road this British beast is surprisingly agile for such a big car.
The steering feels direct and the front end responds with much more precision and poise than you should reasonably expect from a car with such an exaggerated bonnet.
No, it doesnât have the dynamic aggression the more compact Vantage offers, but it manages to take elements of that car and combine it with the GT nature of the DB12 to give you the best of both Aston Martinâs coupes.
Of course, the catch is itâs much too fast for Australian roads and isnât really designed to be a track day car, so in Australia - without autobahns or more liberal views on speeding - the Vanquish in many respects doesnât make sense.
But that is arguably its driving essence, you buy it because you know what itâs capable of, even if youâll rarely use it, and that is an absolute luxury.
So, with 432kW and around 1160Nm, even though the G580 weighs in at around three tonnes, youâre talking 0-100 km/h in 4.7 seconds. And this car gets up and goes⌠like a beast.
What you donât get is that traditional Merc-AMG G63 V8 rumble, because, of course, no engine.Â
But you do get what Mercedes calls âG-Roarâ, essentially a sound bar at the front of the car also using the audio system inside to give it what is not exactly an engine noise but some sense of the car progressing. And you can turn it off for completely silent running.
âElectric Dynamic Selectâ changes the parameters of the motors, transmission, suspension, ESP and steering as required. On-road that means âComfortâ, âSportâ and âIndividualâ modes, with off-road comprising âTrailâ and âRockâ. In the Comfort setting drive flows primarily to one axle for optimum energy efficiency.
Suspension is by double wishbones at the front and a De Dion-style live (rigid) axle at the rear. Youâve got the same adaptive-type set-up as per other G-Class models, so âComfortâ and âSportâ modes and of the many traditional G-Class traits this car exhibits, ride quality is one of them.
Even in Comfort youâll find even little bumps and thumps making their way up into the seat of the pants and the cabin. It is after all a body-on-frame, ladder-chassis type vehicle and thatâs not unusual. Â
In terms of steering, itâs accurate and road feel is good. Youâve got 275-wide Falken Azenis FK520 tyres that are more on- than off-road focused. The car feels stable and nicely planted on the road.
The physical brakes are by ventilated discs front and rear, and the big rotors are the same size (353mm) all around. They work nicely and feel like a conventional set-up.
Regenerative braking kicks in as soon as you lift off the accelerator pedal. The powertrain is harvesting energy as the car decelerates and there are four levels you can adjust with the steering wheel paddles up to a quite aggressive level - not quite, but close to a single-pedal set-up.
Off-road, the G580âs âG-Steeringâ system allows the wheels to turn at different speeds to induce slight âdrift-likeâ oversteer and tighten the turning circle. It works beautifully and the carâs fording depth is 850mm, a full 150mm more than internal-combustion G-Class models.
A three-speed off-road crawl function is adjustable to speeds as low as 2.0km/h, and the car is claimed to remain stable on sideways slopes up to 35 degrees.Â
Torque vectoring is used to create âvirtual diff locksâ and thereâs a âlow-rangeâ setting. Switch to the âOffroad Cockpitâ and data including gradient, lateral inclination, compass readings, tyre pressures and the selected G-Mode appear.
A âTransparent Bonnetâ function creates a virtual view of whatâs approaching and passing under the front wheels to help the driver pick their way through steep ascents or declines.
For the record, the G580âs approach angle is 32 degrees, departure is 30.7, breakover is 20.3 and ground-clearance is 250mm.
And of course, with the wheels independently powered, the G580âs signature move is what Mercedes-Benz calls a âG-Turnâ but the rest of the world calls a tank turn.
If you encounter an obstacle that makes forward progress impossible, the system spins the left- and right-hand wheels in opposite directions so this brute can turn on the spot like an M1 Abrams. You canât help but crack up laughing when executing this extreme party trick!
In terms of miscellaneous observations around ergonomics and the car in general, it has a 13.6-metre conventional turning circle. So if youâre not using the G Turn function in the car park be ready for a sizeable turning arc.
Also, those aero tweaks here and there seem to have had an effect. Wind noise, especially for such an upright, squared-off design is surprisingly modest. And overall, from a build point of view, this car feels as though itâs been carved from a solid piece of metal. In every aspect it presents as a quality item.
Thereâs no ANCAP rating given the extreme low-volume nature of the Vanquish. However, it does come with complete airbag coverage for both occupants and a laundry list of safety acronyms.
These include autonomous emergency braking (AEB), forward collision warning (FCW), adaptive cruise control (ACC), traffic sign recognition (TSR), lane keep assist (LKA), lane departure warning (LDW), blind spot assist (BSA) and rear cross-traffic assist (RCTA).
In addition thereâs driver attention assist, to make sure you stay alert in such an expensive machine, and door exit assist, so you donât open the long doors into a passing car or cyclist.
Importantly, none of these systems are intrusive or annoying, so credit to Aston Martin for integrating them smoothly.
Although the Mercedes-AMG G63 carries a maximum five-star ANCAP safety assessment from 2018, the pure-electric G580 is unrated. But crash avoidance tech includes active cruise control, âActive Steering Assistâ, high-speed AEB, traffic sign recognition, lane-keeping assist, blind-spot monitoring, driver fatigue monitoring as well as a 360-degree camera view and âActive Parking Assistâ.
And if a crash is unavoidable, there are no fewer than 11 airbags on-board, including driver and front passenger front and side, rear side, full-length curtains, driver and passenger knee and a front centre bag.
There are three top-tether points for child seats across the second row, with ISOFIX anchors on the two outer positions.
Despite the extraordinary price tag the Vanquish is covered by a very standard three-year/unlimited kilometre warranty. Itâs a surprising, and some might argue disappointing, short period of coverage for a car that is not only expensive but should have a long life.
However, it does redeem itself in some way by including the first five years of servicing into the cost of the car. Ferrari offers seven for its models, so Aston Martin is still behind the market, but included servicing feels right for a car costing nearly $1 million once you put it in traffic.
The G580 is covered by Mercedes-Benz Australiaâs five-year/unlimited-km warranty, which remains the standard offering in the premium part of the market and an eight-year/160,000km drive battery warranty.
Service intervals are every 12 months or 20,000km with service plan pricing available over three ($2645), four ($3980) and five ($4670) years. In approximate terms, each workshop visit will cost âaroundâ $900. Not exactly cheap, especially for an EV, but this is no ordinary electric vehicle.