2025 Mercedes-Benz EQB 300 4matic
Premium Electric SUV · AWD
Based on battery health, build quality, owner data, EPA range, and market pricing
Above average for 2025 EV Compact SUVs (class avg 68 · top 36%)
Personalize this scoreIs a low score bad?
Last scanned 22 days ago
The 2025 Mercedes-Benz EQB 300 4matic comes with 205 miles of EPA range, 100 kW fast charging and a 60 kWh battery, and a do-not-drive recall is in play, so VIN status comes before everything else.
Score read
A 70/100 makes this a records-first inspection. Software and driver-assist score is the cleaner read at 100/100; range and efficiency score needs more diligence at 37/100. On Reddit, owners keep flagging the same two issues: battery degradation and battery health. A clean VIN lookup matters more than the headline count.
Price context
This trim started from $57,000 new. Used examples have come down since launch, but pricing varies by miles, condition, and how the model is moving right now; pull a current KBB Fair Purchase, an Edmunds True Market Value, or an active dealer listing for this exact trim, and anchor your offer there. Walk if the seller will not move off new-car-style pricing.
Who this is for
✓ Good for
- ★ Weekend driver Performance, fun, low mileage
✗ Avoid if you are a
- ⏱ Daily commuter ≤50 mi/day, predictable charging
- ☷ Family hauler 3+ kids, cargo, towing
- ↦ Road tripper Long trips, needs DC fast network
Gotchas
- Serviceable Recall paperwork has to match the exact VIN.
Mitigation Use NHTSA and the automaker lookup, then require repair records instead of a verbal promise.
- Built in Range is the easy place to overbuy this trim (37/100).
Mitigation Check your commute, winter margin, and fast-charge plan before you assume the EPA number fits your use.
- Verify Current market pricing is not confirmed well enough for this trim.
Mitigation Compare KBB, J.D. Power, and live listings for the same trim before treating price as a buying signal.
Pre-purchase inspection
- 1 Run the exact VIN through NHTSA and the automaker recall lookup before discussing price.
- 2 Compare the dashboard range estimate with the EPA 205-mile rating after a full charge.
- 3 Confirm how much of the 10-year/155,000-mile battery warranty remains and whether it transfers.
- 4 If road trips matter, run a short DC fast-charge session and watch whether speed tapers normally.
- 5 Map your normal highway route and winter margin against the EPA range before you treat it as a road-trip car.
VIN status first This model has 1 NHTSA recall record. The exact VIN lookup decides whether the car in front of you is clear.
Complaint context This scan found 0 NHTSA complaint records (0 per 10K VINs, low for any vehicle class). Read the themes below before treating the raw count as the verdict.
Price anchor Current market range is $36,926-$56,717. Use that range to compare listings for the same trim, mileage, and condition.
Pricing & Market Value
Score Breakdown
What matters most to you?
Drag the sliders to prioritize what you care about. Your TrimIndex Score recalculates instantly.
Vehicle Specifications
EVs at your price point that match or beat this trim
Price-gated peer set: vehicles within $37.5K–$56.2K market value (±20% of $46.8K). 2 outscore · 4 score within ±2. Mixed across makes — no "spend more, score better" comps.
bZ4X
- ✓ +31 mi more range
- ✓ Better build quality
Blazer
- ✓ +107 mi more range
Solterra
- ✓ Better build quality
- ✓ +22 mi more range
EX30
- ✓ +52 mi more range
- ✓ 800V DC charging
ARIYA
- ✓ Notably better build quality
- ✓ +11 mi more range
EX40
- ✓ +55 mi more range
- ✓ Better build quality
- ✓ 800V DC charging
The federal $4,000 used-EV credit ended Sept 30, 2025.
But 10 states still run their own used-EV rebate programs — some up to $5,000. Pick your state to see what's available for this trim.
Source & disclaimer
Dealers make ~$12,099 on the average car loan.
After the price is set, the finance manager runs four plays to rebuild margin. Every buyer without a pre-approval is a target. Here's exactly what they run — and what stops each one.
78% of dealer loans carry a hidden +1.13% markup above what the lender actually charges. You never see it — it's buried in the contract. · CFPB
Dealer must match or beat your lender — they can't add margin invisibly. The markup play is dead on arrival.
Once you answer, they stretch the term to hit your number. Median result: $4K less off the price, 12 more months on the loan. · Industry avg
Financing is done. Only the sale price is on the table — and the dealer knows it.
Back-office F&I profit averages $1,975/vehicle, up 8.5% YoY. These products exist — but dealer markup is 4–10x what you'd pay elsewhere. · Dealership Guy
Dealer GAP runs $500–1K. Your insurer sells the same coverage for $100–250 over 5 years. Now you know.
"Your loan fell through — come re-sign." This pulls your APR up +5% on average. It's legal. It works because you've already driven the car home. · Ctr for Responsible Lending
A lender commitment letter means the deal is final. "Pending dealer approval" doesn't apply. You can't be yo-yo'd.
That's 17 months of your car payment — handed to the dealer's finance department for nothing.
Takes 2 minutes. No obligation to use it — but you'll walk in with all the leverage.
Pre-approval is a soft credit inquiry — no score impact. FICO treats all auto-loan hard pulls within 14 days as one, so you can still shop rates at the dealer.
NHTSA Recalls (1)
DRIVE
Mercedes-Benz USA, LLC (MBUSA) is recalling certain 2022-2025 EQB 250, EQB 300 4MATIC, and EQB 350 4MATIC electric vehicles. The high voltage battery may fail internally and lead to a vehicle fire while parked or driving.
A vehicle fire while parked or driving can increase the risk of injury.
Check VIN status at NHTSA.govNHTSA Complaints (0 total · 0 per 10K US vehicles · low for any vehicle class)
No complaints filed with NHTSA for this vehicle.
What Owners Are Saying
"2025 Mercedes-Benz EQB 300 Active Lane Change Assist Hey EQB owners, quick question. I’ve noticed all over the Mercedes website that the Driver Assistance Package clearly includes Active Lane Change Assist, and it’s even listed for the 2025 EQB 300 when that package is selected. My spec sheet also shows the Driver Assistance Package, and on my car Active Steering Assist works, Active Distance/Speed Assist works, and basically everything else works, but Active Lane Change Assist does not. It’s not functioning and it’s not even a setting anywhere in the assistance menu. I went to the dealership and they tried to tell me the EQB doesn’t come with Active Lane Change Assist at all, which makes no sense since it’s listed on the site and on my spec sheet. Do any of you actually have Active Lane Change Assist working on your EQB, or is this a software lock or is Mercedes just misleading me? Trying to figure out if it’s just me or if everyone’s EQB is missing it too."
"MercedesEQ owners discuss the EQB battery recall, including park-outside and 80-percent charge guidance, replacement timing, and frustration with the slow remedy schedule."
"Mercedes-Benz EQB recall: Is the risk only above 80% charge? Looking for expert insight For our EQB, we’ve been told not to charge above 80% and to avoid enclosed parking due to the recall. Trying to understand what this actually means in real life. Is the risk only above 80%? Is staying under 80% enough, or are there other precautions? Is it actually safe to keep driving the car? Would love to hear from anyone with real-world experience or technical insight. For reference, here is an official recall notice from Australia that describes the issue in more technical detail:"