2025 Polestar 4 Long Range Dual Motor

2025 Polestar 4 Long Range Dual Motor

Premium Electric SUV · AWD

272 mi 100 kWh 544 hp NMC CCS1 200 kW DC 0 recalls 0 complaints · 0/10K
71 /100
TrimIndex Score

Based on battery health, build quality, owner data, EPA range, and market pricing

Above average for 2025 EV SUVs (class avg 66 · top 18%)

Personalize this score
Is a low score bad?
Not always. A low score flags items to verify before buying — and often signals stronger value, since heavier discounts already price the risk in. See TrimIndex’s pre-purchase inspection →
Sourced from: NHTSA· EPA· KBB· J.D. Power ·11 Reddit threads ·23 forum excerpts

Last scanned 22 days ago

Buyer brief · 276 words

The 2025 Polestar 4 Long Range Dual Motor has 272 miles of EPA range, 200 kW fast charging and a 100 kWh battery, and a mid-pack composite means the records-and-test-drive call matters more than the headline.

Score read

A 71/100 makes this worth comparing, not chasing. Build quality score is 97/100, but range and efficiency score is only 37/100. Reddit threads cluster around software tech and owner satisfaction — verify both against the service records. Next, prove battery condition, charging behavior, tires, and service history.

Price context

Bring your own comps Pull current comps before negotiating

This trim started from $62,900 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

✗ Avoid if you are a

  • $
    Bargain hunter Best TCO, reliability + low depreciation

Gotchas

  • 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 Compare the dashboard range estimate with the EPA 272-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 Map your normal highway route and winter margin against the EPA range before you treat it as a road-trip car.
  • 5 Review title, service history, tire condition, and charging-equipment records before final price.
TrimIndex Intelligence
Synthesized 9 days ago
0 NHTSA Complaints 0 per 10K VINs · low for any vehicle class
0 Recall Campaigns
11 Reddit Threads r/Polestar
23 Forum Excerpts avg +0.04 sentiment

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 $56,300-$56,300. Use that range to compare listings for the same trim, mileage, and condition.

Analyzed by TrimIndex Data Engine · Scoring methodology →

Pricing & Market Value

New-price reference $62,900 Reference only; not the exact sticker
Current Market Value $56,300 – $56,300 Composite from KBB & J.D. Power
Exact MSRP comparison unavailable
KBB
Fair Purchase Price
$56,300
J.D. Power
Consumer Verified™

Score Breakdown

What matters most to you?

Drag the sliders to prioritize what you care about. Your TrimIndex Score recalculates instantly.

Your Score
71
/100
Battery Health
83
Weight29%
Owner Satisfaction
54
Weight24%
Build Quality
97
Weight18%
Range & Efficiency
37
Weight18%
Software & Tech
86
Weight11%

Vehicle Specifications

272
miles
EPA Range
100
kWh
Battery
544
hp
Horsepower
41.0
kWh/100mi
Efficiency
AWD
 
Drivetrain
Peers in the same budget · higher or similar score

EVs at your price point that match or beat this trim

Price-gated peer set: vehicles within $45.0K–$67.6K market value (±20% of $56.3K). 1 outscore · 5 score within ±2. Mixed across makes — no "spend more, score better" comps.

Higher score Similar ±2
Used-EV incentive finder

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
SourceData compiled April 2026 from each state's administering agency.
DisclaimerProgram rules change. TrimIndex is not a tax advisor — confirm eligibility with your state's issuing agency before purchase.
The Financing Room · What Actually Happens

Dealers make ~$13,825 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.

01 · Without pre-approval
+$1,889
Rate markup

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

With pre-approval ↓
Rate is already locked

Dealer must match or beat your lender — they can't add margin invisibly. The markup play is dead on arrival.

02 · Without pre-approval
+$1,800
"What's your monthly budget?"

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

With pre-approval ↓
One number to negotiate

Financing is done. Only the sale price is on the table — and the dealer knows it.

03 · Without pre-approval
+$1,775
GAP + extended warranty upsell

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

With pre-approval ↓
You can shop it or skip it

Dealer GAP runs $500–1K. Your insurer sells the same coverage for $100–250 over 5 years. Now you know.

04 · Without pre-approval
+$8,361
Yo-yo / spot delivery

"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

With pre-approval ↓
Financing already closed

A lender commitment letter means the deal is final. "Pending dealer approval" doesn't apply. You can't be yo-yo'd.

You overpay
~$13,825

That's 17 months of your car payment — handed to the dealer's finance department for nothing.

Your cost to get pre-approved
$0

Takes 2 minutes. No obligation to use it — but you'll walk in with all the leverage.

Lock your rate before you go to the lot.
Soft pull only No SSN required Works at any dealer

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)

No NHTSA recalls on record.

NHTSA Complaints (0 total · 0 per 10K US vehicles · low for any vehicle class)

0
NHTSA Complaints

No complaints filed with NHTSA for this vehicle.

What Owners Are Saying

▲ +0.80Satisfaction

"One Month With the Polestar 4 When I first got my Polestar 4, I was really wishing for more reviews from US based customers so here is mine and I hope it is helpful. I've had my LRDM P4 for a month now and it's been wonderful. Pros and Cons below: PROS: 1. Great handling, great acceleration. I was coming from a 2018 Model 3 (I keep my cars for a very long time) and I my favorite thing about it was how zippy it was on freeways. P4, despite being a bigger car, has a very similar handling, especially in Performance mode. 2. Accurate Range: One of the things I disliked about my Model 3 was how inaccurate the range always was, no matter what updates it got. It would say 200 miles, I would drive a five miles, and it would drop to 160 miles. P4's range estimates, particularly in dynamic mode, have been very good. At 80 percent charge, I'm usually around 230 miles on dynamic. 3. Interior, front: Incredible and my favorite part about the car. The seats are luxurious and do not trigger my lower back pain (which was one of the reasons I gave up the Model 3) US dealers are giving a discount on purchases and leases, so I splurged for the Nappa Leather and the massage option is wonderful. Tons of legroom, which is good for me as I'm tall (6'). A lot of storage, in the middle pass through area, and a reliable phone charger up top. Lots of elbow and arm room, which is good if you're all elbows like me. Interior back: I drive around a tall teenager (6'2) and along with his tall and sports-loving friends and they regularly comment on how nice the backseat is, especially with the ambient lighting and light tint on the windows. They also love the seat recline, which is great for long journeys after an away sports meet, when they just want to go to sleep for a bit. Interior trunk: A lot of space and quite deep when needed. With front seats down, you can fit quite a lot of sports equipment, boxes in here. 4. I have heard sound system complaints, but I play music as well as listen to it constantly, and I find the sound system quite good. Crisp voices for podcasts and directions, good bass for rap, great dynamic range for classical, and great midrange for alternative and rock music. You just have to know how to use the equalizer and adjust your frequencies appropriately. The system is very responsive. 5. Infotainment. My biggest worry was the infotainment b/c I'd heard nightmare stories that it was difficult to use, unresponsive, had incorrect GPS info etc. I've only had one issue, which I will explain in the Cons. Otherwise quite intuitive and easy to use. 6. Stylish exterior: I love how the car looks, and as they aren't as common in the US, I've gotten a lot of questions and comments on it, including getting stopped in parking lots a few times. People really seem to like it--its very sleek when compared to some of the boxier EV SUVs that have become more common. The fact that it drives like a sportier car but has the interior of an SUV/family"

— r/Polestar · 2026
▲ +0.60Satisfaction

"BMW iX3 neuve klasse vs PS4 Has anyone driven both the BMW iX3 (new gen) and the Polestar 4? How do they compare in real-world driving, steering feel, comfort, and handling? The iX3 gets great reviews overall, but the Polestar 4 looks more performance-focused on paper. I really don’t like the design of iX3 though, PS4 a different level."

— r/Polestar · 2026
▲ +0.50Software

"I made a Home Assistant integration (WIP) that exposes most of the functionality of the mobile app Hi all. I've spent some time building a python library and a Home Assistant Integration that mimics the features and functionality of the mobile application as much as possible. I am developing against a Polestar 4, and the mobile app seems to support multiple backends so it is currently unclear which other vehicles are currently supported at the moment. I suspect later models PS2 and PS3 may also work, but I am hoping to get some feedback from you guys. **Repository** The project is not finished, but most of the below features work although some may be buggy. If you do decide to use it, make sure to regularly check for updates for bugfixes. >**Note on 12v battery impact:** This library communicates with Polestar’s cloud servers, not the car directly. It polls the server every 10 minutes (default, configurable in HA) but it also keeps long lived streams open to the cloud to listen to changes (Battery, Location, Door status etc). It is unclear how much this affects the 12v battery. If you have the opportunity, please monitor your battery voltage and report back. **Features** (Some incomplete) \- **Battery** — charge level, range, charging status, power \- **Location** — last known and last parked position \- **Climate** — start/stop climatization with target temperature, seat and steering wheel heating \- **Climate timers** — view scheduled parking climate timers \- **Locks** — lock, unlock, trunk unlock \- **Honk** **& flash** — flash lights, honk or honk+flash \- **Windows** — open/close all windows \- **Exterior** — door, window, sunroof, hood, tailgate, and alarm status \- **Charging** — target SOC, amp limit, charge timers, start/stop immediate charging \- **Charge locations** — full CRUD for saved locations with per-location amp limits, min SOC, timers, departure times, and smart charging \- **Health** — service warnings, fluid levels, tyre pressures (kPa), all exterior light warnings, 12V battery \- **Availability** — vehicle online status with unavailable reason \- **Weather** — temperature at car location \- **OTA** — software update info, scheduling, install now, cancel \- **Pre-cleaning** — air quality status (PM2.5, AQI) and start/stop cabin pre-cleaning"

— r/Polestar · 2026
▲ +0.20Software

"Confused about MKBHD’s take on the Polestar 4 I’m sure a lot of us have watched MKBHD’s review of the Polestar 4. His honest reviews and hot-takes are always S-tier. I was surprised watching this one though, as, based on the title, I had assumed one of his two problems with the car would be the software. Instead, he suggests that the software is great, as me mentions that it’s good enough to compete with class leaders Tesla and Rivian. Based on what I’ve read here and heard from other polestar (2 and 3) owners, I found this take confusing. I thought the software for most Polestars across the board was not great: buggy, frustrating, etc. A bit about me: I am an incredibly frustrated Audi Q6 owner, who has been very Polestar-curious… My understanding was that Audi EV customers and Polestar customers find ourselves in a similar predicament: decent, capable hardware, but we’re forced to deal with annoying, often times frustrating bugs and UX shortcomings. However, according to MKBHD, this is not the case! Is the software for the Polestar 4 totally different (improved)? Or has the polestar software / OS just gotten a lot better and more refined for everyone lately?"

— r/Polestar · 2026
▽ 0.80Satisfaction

"Tried the P4 twice and got carsick both times TLDR: Tried the P4 twice and got carsick both times. Are we the only ones? So the lease on my girlfriends BMW 420d is up and for tax reasons we can only choose an EV. We popped in a random BMW dealer to check out the new BMW iX3, but learned we only are able to use the a specific dealer to order and test-drive. No big deal but there was a Polestar dealer very close by and we had noticed it was on the list of approved dealers so decided to give it a go. We’re happy with did because we’ re very impressed with the Polestar 4. The design inside is truly fantastic, sitting in the back makes us want to be driven around. The dealer was going to close soon but he didn’t mind us having a quick 20 minute test drive of the single motor version. We have since been struck by three afflictions: 1) **Range anxiety**: This is difficult to gauge how big a deal it is but there is an undeniable difference in generation between what the iX3 or the upcoming i3 has on offer and the P4. The iX3 seems to actually reach 400kW easily while it seems less stable for the P4. Dealer says he easily gets 160/180kw. Is that others experience? I read online it isn't really the case. 2) **Analysis paralysis**: Speaking of reading online: There are a worrying amount of issues people have posted. From smaller stuff like quiet navigation instruction or wiper fluid sensor not working. To truly terrifying things like being locked out of the car after a software update while at work without a key fob or being pulled into traffic because of overzealous lane keeping. That last one really is scary to us if we forget a “ pre-flight check” of turning off all the things that might kill you. 3) **Motion sickness**: This last is one that I haven’t read that much online. I tend to get carsick easily and we had skipped lunch the first time we tried the P4. But my gf is way less susceptible and she felt it too. We also noticed the suspension feeling a little rougher than we expected. That’s why we decided to try another time with the P4 dual motor with full bellies. While less of an issue than the first time, it still felt like an issue. My girlfriend also noticed some shaking with the steering while on the motorway. I wonder if it was because lane assist was on. Maybe we’re just not used to EV’s but we had an appointment with the Audi A6 and Q6 later that day and didn’t have this issue (but we did have other issues with the real dealbreaker being it just isn’t a car we feel passionate about). Is this something someone else experienced? We managed to try the iX3 and we were very impressed with that one too. For different reasons than the P4. It is a very nice car to drive. The design is very different from the P4 but it has its own fantastic qualities. Unfortunately it is sold out until February. We would prefer getting the i3 but have to convince the leasing company to wait until September to order. We keep coming back to the P4 though. I"

— r/Polestar · 2026
▽ 0.60Software

"#4· Mar 24, 2026 #5· Mar 24, 2026 #7· Mar 24, 2026 1\. North American P4s with Performance Pack not retaining the performance drive mode between drive cycles like all other markets. 2\. Fixing whatever the logic is supposed to be happening with the electrochromic roof. #9· Mar 25, 2026 Polestar have acknowledged the camera failures in 4.2.10 and said a fix is coming. Hopefully this is it. #10· Mar 25, 2026"

— Polestar Forum · 2026
▽ 0.50Software

"Anyone else getting a "cameras need calibration" warning after OTA 4.2.10? Hey everyone, Since updating my car Polestar 4 LRSM to OTA **4.2.10**, I’ve started getting a warning that my **cameras need to be calibrated** whenever I use my **turn signals**. The message pops up briefly each time, even though nothing unusual happened before the update and everything worked fine prior. This behavior is normally expected right after a hardware change or major software reset, but not during regular blinker use… so I’m wondering: **Has anyone else experienced this after installing 4.2.10?** Is this a known issue with the update, or should I schedule a service appointment? Thanks!"

— r/Polestar · 2026
▽ 0.20Build Quality

"New Polestar 4 owner. Loving it, but a few quirks… normal or worth flagging? Hi all, About to book our Polestar 4 in for a battery health check in a few weeks (car is <1 year old, ~8k miles, bought outright), and wanted to sanity check a few things with the community before I turn up with a “list” 😅 First off – we absolutely love the car. It’s a massive upgrade from our XC60 D4 in pretty much every way. That said… in the two weeks we’ve owned it, a few niggly things have cropped up: 1. Heated seats & steering wheel – they work, but feel very underwhelming. At max setting they’re maybe 20–30% of what we had in the Volvo. Not sure if this is just how Polestar does it or if something’s off? 2. AC performance – had a warm day today and the cabin hit 26°C. Cranked AC to max with recirculation and it took a long time (like 20 mins into the drive) before it made any real difference. Expected much quicker cooling. 3. Loud banging noises behind the dash – almost every time we get in, about 10–30 seconds after startup. Not subtle at all – properly loud. I assumed it was normal, but now I’m second guessing with the AC issue. 4. Pilot Assist behaviour – seems to hug the left side of the lane quite aggressively, sometimes almost on the line. Feels more jittery and less centred than what we had in the XC60. 5. Digital rear-view mirror at night – daytime is perfect, genuinely love it. But at night, if there’s a car behind, the display becomes really fuzzy/blurry to the point it’s hard to see anything. From videos I’ve seen, this doesn’t seem normal? We’ve updated to the latest firmware already, so I don’t think it’s a software version issue. So a couple of questions: Are any/all of these just “Polestar quirks”? Or should I flag everything ahead of the appointment instead of just turning up for the battery check? Is there a “best way” to present multiple small issues without sounding like that customer? 😅 None of these are dealbreakers individually, but together they’ve got us slightly concerned. Appreciate any insight from other owners!"

— r/Polestar · 2026

Showing 8 of 13 owner excerpts (sorted by sentiment strength)

Frequently Asked Questions

The read 2025 Polestar 4 Long Range Dual Motor · Score 71/100 · 0 recalls, 0 complaints (0/10K VINs) across 11 Reddit threads.

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