Polestar 5 Reviews
You'll find all our Polestar 5 reviews right here. Polestar 5 prices range from $171,100 for the 5 Dual Motor Launch Edition to $193,100 for the 5 Performance Launch Edition.
Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the 's features, design, practicality, fuel consumption, engine and transmission, safety, ownership and what it's like to drive.
The most recent reviews sit up the top of the page, but if you're looking for an older model year or shopping for a used car, scroll down to find Polestar dating back as far as 2024.
Or, if you just want to read the latest news about the Polestar 5, you'll find it all here.
Polestar Reviews and News
Will all the new Chinese EV brands survive?
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By Tim Nicholson · 20 Nov 2024
The influx of new automotive brands coming to Australia, largely from China, is going to cause serious upheaval in the new-vehicle market, according to the boss of one of Australia’s key EV brands.A number of new entrants have either launched in recent months, or plan to launch in the New Year, muscling in on what is already a crowded new-car market.Fresh brands set to hit our shores soon include Leapmotor, Zeekr, Deepal, Skywell, Geely, JAC, Jaecoo, XPeng, and GAC/Aion.The incoming marques are all vying for a slice of Australia’s market that usually sits at over one million sales annually.Polestar Australia Managing Director Scott Maynard said the new brands will shake up the market, but it will be interesting to watch.“Grab some popcorn, it'll be super exciting,” he said at the Polestar 4 launch recently.“So it'll be fascinating to see who can muscle in and displace some of the existing players. It'll be interesting to see who burns bright, burns out and disappears backwards. It'll be fascinating to see how it plays.”He said there could be some clear benefits from the influx of largely EV focussed brands to Australia.“If it electrifies the Australian national vehicle fleet, then that's good in a way. Not all electric cars are necessarily green, but it's definitely a step in the right direction. And if it then forces an uptick in public charging infrastructure and all of those other little bits and pieces, yep, good as well.”Maynard said Polestar holds a unique place in the Australian market, adding the vast majority of the new entrants are chasing a different EV buyer to that of the Chinese-Swedish brand.“Most of those entrants seem to be playing in the volume market. They all seem to be on a quest for world domination. They're all trying to beat each other to outright share and volume, and that's not where we're trying to play.“So we were operating in a completely different space, and I'm proud of the fact that that's where we sit. But in that sub-70k bracket, it's going to get amazing.”Some of the new marques launching soon share space with Polestar and Volvo under the massive Geely Holdings umbrella, including Zeekr and Geely, while Smart - a collaboration between Geely and Mercedes-Benz - also launched recently.Maynard said there was healthy competition between the Geely brands, but added Polestar was unique in the group.“Each of the brands have their own unique persona, their own identity, and so I wouldn't say that we compete, and certainly not ferociously. We eye each other off, I suppose. But we're proud of our position, and we consider our position quite unique to that of any of the other members of the group. And so you wouldn't compare ourselves in terms of volume, share, or any of those measures.”Clarifying his earlier comment that “not all electric cars are necessarily green”, Maynard said he was highlighting how in the electrified vehicle space, “there's different shades of green”, specifically when it comes to servicing batteries.“You put an eight-year warranty on the battery, and people assume that it lasts eight-and-a-half years. But of course, studies show that it lasts significantly longer than that.”Maynard added that Polestar batteries are easily serviced, some other brands are less so.“Our battery is still able to have repairs performed on it, lid off fashion. So the lid comes off the battery, you can replace an individual cell, whereas more and more of the EV brands running now have a battery that has a series of blades that are all glued together. That glue is vicious stuff, because it forms an integral part of the car, it stops the car from falling in half.“And those batteries are infinitely harder to recycle and are not repairable. They are replaced as a single unit, whereas ours can be serviced so that means that cost of repair is pitched against cost of replacement. You can extend the life if you can replace individual components inside it, and also, at the end of life, you can take individual pieces out of it, keep the shell, do all of those sorts of things. That's if you don't choose to turn it into an electricity storage component or something.”While Maynard didn’t mention any other brands by name, it could be seen as a swipe at Chinese giant BYD, which refers to its battery system as ‘Blade’.
Polestar boss takes aim at FCAI
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By Chris Thompson · 29 Sep 2024
At the recent Australian launch of the Polestar 3, CarsGuide spoke to Scott Maynard for one of his first media engagements as the head of Polestar Australia to see what the present and the near future looks like for the Swedish brand.
Polestar 3 gets cheaper rear-drive variant
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By Chris Thompson · 25 Sep 2024
From next year, starting at $118,420 before on-road costs, the Polestar 3 Long Range Single Motor will join the existing Long Range Dual Motor and will boast the longest driving range of the model’s line-up.
Polestar 3 2025 review - Australian first drive
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By Chris Thompson · 25 Sep 2024
On paper and after having reviewed well overseas, signs are good for the new Polestar 3: plenty of power, stacks of features and a properly premium look. It's finally here in Australia, so we're going to find out just how well it handles conditions here in Australia.
Huge $5000 price cut on popular electric car!
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By Samuel Irvine · 02 Sep 2024
The Polestar 2 has been given a stack of new standard equipment and a price cut. For 2025, all Polestar 2 variants will be priced well below the Luxury Car Tax (LCT) threshold, starting at $62,400 (before on-road costs) for the entry-level single motor standard range variant, and rising to $80,830 for the top-spec long range dual-motor with Performance Pack.
The massive Chinese brand just out of sight
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By Tom White · 26 Aug 2024
Geely already operates at a large scale in Australia, but currently hides behind a diverse array of brands.
Electric car battery warranties explained
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By Tom White · 01 Aug 2024
Can you hear what’s coming over the horizon? Probably not, because it’s a swathe of near-silent Electric Vehicles (EVs), set to supersede the bog-standard gas-guzzling Internal Combustion Engine (ICE) car within the next decade or two.
Top 5 fixes that were never needed in cars
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By Laura Berry · 14 Jul 2024
Cars without back windows? Cameras instead of mirrors? Electric cars that sound like petrol ones? Here's our Top 5 things car makers have fixed that weren't broken.
Wild new Tesla smasher
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By Dom Tripolone · 11 Jul 2024
Polestar’s radical new concept gives a glimpse at the electric car brand’s future.The Chinese-owned car maker has debuted its Concept BST electric car at the famous Goodwood Festival of Speed in the UK today.BST is a throw back to the brand’s experimental Polestar 2 from the 2020 Goodwood Festival of Speed nicknamed “The Beast”.That vehicle was a reworked version of the 2 designed to push the envelope of its electric performance.This time “The Beast” is a head-turning concept, which twists the dial all the way up and brings a motorsport flavour to the EV brand.It features bespoke bodywork with flared wheel arches, a wide track and giant 22-inch alloy wheels give it a stout muscular stance.There are plenty of aerodynamic features with a vented front bonnet, front splitter and a massive rear wing.Polestar CEO Thomas Ingenlath said the Concept BST was designed to push the boundaries of performance for Polestar.“This car is a demonstration of how far we can push our performance brand - Polestar turned up to 11 if you will - and a demonstration of how we could apply the BST formula to our line up in the future,” said Ingenlath.Polestar has also debuted the 6 Concept, a sharp looking electric roadster concept.The Polestar 6 is built on the same platform as the Polestar 5, a future swoopy electric sedan due in 2027, and will sit atop the brand’s global line-up.The Polestar 5 and 6 could be in line for a game-changing new battery, too.Polestar has previously shown off groundbreaking battery technology in a 5 prototype.In a world first demonstration, a Polestar 5 prototype vehicle fitted with a new battery design from Israeli company Storedot, and was able to recharge from 10 to 80 per cent in 10 minutes, or the equivalent of 320km of driving range.Ingenlath said the company needed to take the next step to address one of the biggest barriers to electric car ownership.“With this new technology, on longer journeys when drivers do stop they’ll be able to spend less time charging and be back on the road faster than before. In fact, that stop time will be more akin to what they experience with a petrol car today.”
Top five electric SUVs in Australia
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By Stephen Corby · 10 Jul 2024
The top five electric SUVs updated for 2022