2024 Polestar 2 Single Motor
19" wheels
Electric Sedan · RWD
Based on battery health, build quality, owner data, EPA range, and market pricing
Above average for 2024 EV Sedans (class avg 69 · top 6%)
Personalize this scoreIs a low score bad?
Last scanned 22 days ago
2024 Polestar 2 Single Motor (19-inch wheels): a mid-pack composite means the records-and-test-drive call matters more than the headline.
Score read
A 77/100 makes this worth pursuing if the price is sane. Build quality score is 100/100, but owner feedback score is only 49/100. Reddit threads cluster around range and owner satisfaction — verify both against the service records. Next, prove battery condition, charging behavior, tires, and service history.
Price context
This trim started from $52,100 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
- ⏱ Daily commuter ≤50 mi/day, predictable charging
- ↦ Road tripper Long trips, needs DC fast network
✗ Avoid if you are a
- $ Bargain hunter Best TCO, reliability + low depreciation
Gotchas
- Verify Owner feedback is the part to read carefully (49/100).
Mitigation Read the complaint themes and ask whether this VIN has already had those issues repaired.
- 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 Compare the dashboard range estimate with the EPA 320-mile rating after a full charge.
- 2 Confirm how much of the 8-year/100,000-mile battery warranty remains and whether it transfers.
- 3 If road trips matter, run a short DC fast-charge session and watch whether speed tapers normally.
- 4 Read the complaint themes, not just the count, and ask the seller whether those issues have shown up on this VIN.
- 5 Review title, service history, tire condition, and charging-equipment records before final price.
No recall records in this scan That helps the shortlist, but it does not replace a VIN lookup, battery report, and service-history check.
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 $24,600-$29,695. Use that range to compare listings for the same trim, mileage, and condition.
Pricing & Market Value
Score Breakdown
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Vehicle Specifications
EVs at your price point that match or beat this trim
Price-gated peer set: vehicles within $21.7K–$32.6K market value (±20% of $27.1K). 0 outscore · 2 score within ±2. Mixed across makes — no "spend more, score better" comps.
2
- ✓ Better infotainment UX
Model 3
- ✓ Happier owners overall
- ✓ 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 ~$8,517 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 21 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 (0)
NHTSA 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
"First week with my Polestar 2 MY26. Honestly the best car I have ever driven Just picked up my new Polestar 2 MY26 a week ago and I honestly could not be happier. This is my first fully electric car. I have previously only driven ICE cars like Audi and Volvo, plus one plug in hybrid, so this was a bit of a leap for me. But after just one week, I can already say this is the best car I have ever owned. The whole car feels very well built. It has great handling and feels very safe and planted on the road. I knew going in that real world range is always lower than advertised, but I am still impressed. With temperatures around 6 to 8 degrees Celsius, the car’s estimate based on my driving suggests I can get close to 500 km at 100 percent. That is better than I expected. I am looking forward to doing a proper long drive soon to really test it. For now, I mostly charge to 90 percent since I use it for commuting. This is the Long Range Single Motor Business edition on a 3 year lease, which includes the Plus, Pilot and Climate packages as well as tinted rear windows. I chose the RWD version mainly for the range, since performance and acceleration are not my main priorities. That said, the acceleration you still get from a single motor is honestly very impressive and more than enough for everyday overtaking and normal driving. I also like the idea that this is one of the final versions of the Polestar 2 before a future update, which hopefully means it is a well refined model. That makes it feel like a great choice for my first Polestar. Space wise, it works great for my needs. Child seats fit well in the back, and the trunk is deeper than I expected. I am 185 cm tall and can have a comfortable driving position without making it cramped for passengers behind me. At first, I was a bit annoyed by the center console and steering wheel touching my knee when I rested my foot while using adaptive cruise control. But after adjusting the steering wheel height and seat position, and just getting used to it, that is no longer an issue. I was also a bit skeptical about the plastic aero inserts on the wheels, but honestly they look fine. I have decided not to overthink it. Maybe something to reconsider next time. I did not go for extra options like Pixel headlights or the Bowers and Wilkins sound system, so this one has the Harman Kardon setup. After tweaking the 12 band EQ and adjusting bass and sub levels, I am very happy with it. I mostly listen to EDM and techno, and it delivers solid bass, good depth and clear sound. More than enough for me. The interior with the Black Ash deco looks really good and feels very premium. Nothing feels cheap or plastic. Everything feels solid and well put together, with a real premium feel throughout, and nothing rattles or creaks while driving. The Vapor color looks much better in real life than I expected. It also stands out nicely among all the white, black and grey or silver cars you see everywhere, at least where I li"
"Tried a Polestar 2 DM 2023 this weekend hello dear Polestar community this weekend I had the pleasure to travel 900 km with a Polestar 2 Dual Motor rental (2023, 78 kWh) and I am a bit blown away and considering upgrading from my BMW i3s. It’s really a blast, wether on country side roads or on the autobahn, and quite comfortable too. I have a few questions though. is it worth investing 5000-10000 more for a MY 2024 / later instead of a second hand 2023 and earlier model? I read it’s a bit more efficient and the battery is a hand KwH larger, but otherwise? What should I consider? Currently Polestar is selling the P2 for 42’000€ / 40’000 CHF new. Good second hand P2 with around 100’000 km are to be found starting 20’000€. usually I keep my cars quite long. where do you see a 10-15 year old Polestar 2 in terms of reliability? the rental had “only“ 90’000 km and was already in pretty rough shape… there is no option for three zone AC (separate controls in the back), correct? thanks for some ideas!"
"Also, as Giove mentioned above, charging performance is good enough that when I've needed to charge during a longer trip, my personal 'comfort break' requirements have been longer than the charging time such that I've had to keep an eye on the time to ensure that I'm ready to drive again before the car hits the 80% limit I always set when fast charging. In short, neither range nor charging time has ever been an issue for my pattern of usage, something that has been a very pleasant surprise for my first EV experience and something that many of my ICE-driving friends find hard to believe. #20· Aug 31, 2024 I've only had my LRSM for a few weeks so my data is much more limited, but broadly similar in terms of kWh/100m."
"#18· Aug 30, 2024 ok, i've consciously specced for range (19", LRSM, plus package), i have summer tyres on, it's 20° outside, but 17 kwh/100 km all highway (60/80 up to 170 kmh) is hard to believe. and the charging performance are great as well. i charged too much twice already. 20 minutes to push a burger down the throat and i was already at 80%, 10 minutes or less to reach a toilette and come back and i was at 50. i'll post you the picture with final trip calculation (tomorrow i have mountains), but as a highway beast it _really_ delivers. #19· Aug 30, 2024 FWIW, I've had my MY24 LRSM for just over a year and have put in 3566.91 kWh for 12,554 miles, which I calculate is 28.4 kWh/100 miles. That's with enjoying the performance and not bothering to be economical. Checking the stats in the app, it reports 25.4 kWh/100 miles over the last 6492.6 miles since resetting the manual trip (TM). So that's an average range of about 288 miles over the whole year and about 322 miles over the past six months when the weather has been warmer."
"My Polestar 2 Keeps Dying... On The Charger Hey folks. I've got a '24 p2 that, for the second time now, has let me down by being *totally dead* when I walked up to it. About a month ago, this happened for the first time and a tow to the dealership resulted in a 12 volt jump and software update. What's really strange, both times the car was plugged in and the app reported the car fully charged (yet disconnected...) Anyone run into similar? any advice?"
"Watch out for service center charges on software updates P2 - 2022. Bought it in 24. Had a recall on it at the time so I went in for a software update - which was free of course. Been stuck on 3.x ever since and decided to go for another software update and do my BRAKE fluid. My dad brought the car in and I just told him to request those two things. They charged me $220! and it wasn't even 5.x it was 4.x. I was under the impression that software updates were free if you did them at the service center regardless of recall or warranty because its supposed to be free OTA anyway. They did tell my dad that it was going to be a charge but he didn't know what was going on so he did it. I called them and was like what the fuck... that much just to plug it into a computer and wait. Whatever it was done but what pisses me off is that they could have atleast told my dad that 5.0 was going to be free soon due to the backup camera recall. Whatever, the car is great but fuck polestar (software) and the stealerships for shady activity.. they always find a way to get you.. these days its with software and subscriptions. This was at Polestar / Volvo of Princeton in NJ. FUCK THEM THE MANAGER IS A BITCH. Edit: You know another aspect to why I am upset by this is the fact that doing certain maintenance on the car is expensive or somewhat difficult to do yourself like the brake fluid and the costly windshield wipers. Even potentially needing to pay for a hardware upgrade for the infotainment system as it ages. I bought an EV car so the maintenance would cost less. So even with these things its fine but to now have to pay for software upgrades for the car to either run well or function as should makes it comparable in cost to a ICE vehicle. Edit 2: Just incase it wasn't clear I also paid $350 for the brake fluid change. A commentor said that this really isnt a full service which is why they also charged for the software update. For reference I also have a 21 mazda miata and they did a software update on its infotainment system for free when it was out of warranty and I think i got the brake or some other service at the same time Last Edit: Yes technically the service shop isn't wrong and I could have been more diligent - although based on my knowledge or lack of knowledge at the time there was no reason to. I still maintain that polestar and the service centers in tandem are cunts. The polestar 2 is a great car - but I would never pay sticker price for it - I think all of us who got it used last year and earler got lucky because it was so cheap used. I paid 24k minus 4k used EV credit. No Sales Tax in Jersey. Now that daddy trump or whatever politicians patched up everything litterally all three things - tarrifs, sales tax and EV credits - basically its not worth it anymore. Plus the registration fee is high in NJ its like $350 a year now. Either way unless there service is cheaper or better this will be my first and last polestar car because eventually"
"I just talked to the Polestar repair place near me (Volvo Palo Alto) on Thursday and while they knew what I was asking for immediately, they said they couldn’t order it and had no timeline for availability for any of the vehicles they service."
"ok, i can understand that some app is not optimised for AAOS, but this becomes another point in favour of letting me use android auto and giving all the heavy lifting job to my phone processor. ABRP froze multiple times. electroverse performed very poorly as well. it was difficult to evaluate the differences between the option given by GMaps and ABRP because it's not possible to run them side by side (no, GMaps on the drive display is not a planning tool...), there's still no Polestar charge app on AAOS (un-be-fucking-lievable! 🤦♂️). you have to flip back and forth from the home screen with no possibility to swipe between to apps. last bad side of the experience was the price: using exclusively high speed chargers is shitty expensive. i did paid more than i would've if i used an ICE. at least i compensate any other day of the year, but yeah... anyway, once again i see no reason at all anymore that could keep almost the anybody (let's say... 90/95% of public?) to use a BEV as normal everyday drive. #25· Sep 2, 2024"
Showing 8 of 33 owner excerpts (sorted by sentiment strength)