Mercedes G580 (Electric G Wagon) - Nearly Illegal in the UK!

Mercedes G580 (Electric G Wagon) - Nearly Illegal in the UK!

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Discussion

W4NTED

Original Poster:

761 posts

227 months

Friday 11th April
quotequote all
So in the UK the maximum authorised mass for a passenger car is 3500kg - this includes the cars weight plus any passengers or luggage. This aligns with a category B driving licence. Anything above this weight and you will need a Category C1 licence which are for LGVs or Light Goods Vehicles eg small vans and trucks.

If you are driving a car weighing more than 3500kg in the UK roads without the C1 licence then you could get 3 points and a maximum fine of £1000!

The G580 Electric G Wagon weighs 3218Kg.

It has 5 seats

3500-3218 = 282kg

The average weight of a UK adult as per chat gpt is 85kg

Stick 5 adults in the car at 85x5 = 425kg add some luggage and - go figure hehe

So the electric G is bascially a 2 seater SUV


Crazy or what!

PetrolHeadInRecovery

251 posts

28 months

Friday 11th April
quotequote all
Does EV-Database have an error? It lists the unladen weight as a dainty 3085kg: https://ev-database.org/uk/car/2192/Mercedes-Benz-...

W4NTED

Original Poster:

761 posts

227 months

Friday 11th April
quotequote all
PetrolHeadInRecovery said:
Does EV-Database have an error? It lists the unladen weight as a dainty 3085kg: https://ev-database.org/uk/car/2192/Mercedes-Benz-...
Even if that's true the sums still dont add up as leaves 415kg left to carry 5 adults and thats without Luggage.

Even a couple with their kids and luggae would exceed or be very close to the 415kg left!



Peterpetrole

695 posts

10 months

Friday 11th April
quotequote all
You should flag this up as a concern to all four people who will buy one.

RicksAlfas

13,989 posts

257 months

Friday 11th April
quotequote all
They had to up the GVW of electric vans to 4,250kg from the usual 3,500kg.
Would this fall under the same category?

https://www.fleetnews.co.uk/news/new-driving-licen...


W4NTED

Original Poster:

761 posts

227 months

Friday 11th April
quotequote all
RicksAlfas said:
They had to up the GVW of electric vans to 4,250kg from the usual 3,500kg.
Would this fall under the same category?

https://www.fleetnews.co.uk/news/new-driving-licen...
The G is classified as a passenger car not a van

epom

13,181 posts

174 months

Friday 11th April
quotequote all
Peterpetrole said:
You should flag this up as a concern to all four people who will buy one.
smile

PetrolHeadInRecovery

251 posts

28 months

Friday 11th April
quotequote all
W4NTED said:
PetrolHeadInRecovery said:
Does EV-Database have an error? It lists the unladen weight as a dainty 3085kg: https://ev-database.org/uk/car/2192/Mercedes-Benz-...
Even if that's true the sums still dont add up as leaves 415kg left to carry 5 adults and thats without Luggage.

Even a couple with their kids and luggae would exceed or be very close to the 415kg left!
If I understood correctly, the driver is not included in the load calculations. I checked my vague memory of earlier discussion, and Google AI summary (sorry!) concurred.

Four powerful director types would still be a squeeze, I admit. However, the maximum occupancy I've seen in a G63 (they're common here) has been a driver and one passenger.

Sales are hard to predict: you could get a G580 and an Ioniq 5N for the price of a G63 (or the same price as G500). On the other hand, G63s are common, but I don't remember seeing any G500s on the road in ages.

kambites

69,277 posts

234 months

Friday 11th April
quotequote all
The vehicle is 3085kg "EU", so 3010kg wet curb weight. I guess 490kg isn't exactly a huge amount to be able to carry in that type of vehicle but it's enough for five average adults and some luggage.

JD

2,994 posts

241 months

Friday 11th April
quotequote all
W4NTED said:
RicksAlfas said:
They had to up the GVW of electric vans to 4,250kg from the usual 3,500kg.
Would this fall under the same category?

https://www.fleetnews.co.uk/news/new-driving-licen...
The G is classified as a passenger car not a van
The rule is being changed for all BEV types.

RotorRambler

167 posts

3 months

Friday 11th April
quotequote all
Yes, if ChatGpt is correct:-

“ Yes, the UK is updating its driving licence regulations to accommodate the additional weight of battery electric vehicles (BEVs), particularly benefiting drivers of heavier electric vans and similar vehicles.

New Driving Licence Flexibility for Electric Vehicles

As of April 2025, the UK government has approved changes allowing Category B licence holders (standard car licences) to drive zero-emission vehicles—such as electric or hydrogen-powered vans, minibuses, and SUVs—weighing up to 4.25 tonnes, up from the previous 3.5-tonne limit.

Key updates include:
• Removal of Additional Training: The prior requirement for five hours of extra training to operate these heavier vehicles has been eliminated.
• Expanded Vehicle Types: The new rules extend beyond goods vans to include minibuses, SUVs, and trucks, provided they are zero-emission vehicles.
• Towing Allowance: Drivers can now tow trailers with these vehicles, as long as the combined weight does not exceed 7 tonnes.
• Accessibility Considerations: For vehicles equipped with specialist equipment for disabled passengers, the weight limit increases to 5 tonnes.

Important Notes
• These changes apply only to zero-emission vehicles; traditional fuel vehicles remain subject to the 3.5-tonne limit for Category B licences.
• The updated regulations aim to support the transition to greener vehicles by removing barriers associated with the additional weight of electric powertrains.

These adjustments are expected to facilitate the adoption of electric vehicles by aligning licensing requirements with the realities of electric vehicle weights, thereby promoting environmental goals and reducing administrative burdens for drivers and businesses.



Edited by RotorRambler on Friday 11th April 19:50

samoht

6,572 posts

159 months

Friday 11th April
quotequote all
Link for the above - https://hansard.parliament.uk/commons/2025-04-02/d...

Hansard said:
These regulations will therefore enable the holder of a standard category B licence to drive a fully electric or hydrogen-powered vehicle up to a maximum weight of 4.25 tonnes
Since category B is the standard car driving licence most people hold, and it refers to 'vehicle' rather than being limited to commercial vehicles, I think that G580 drivers are in the clear.


gangzoom

7,228 posts

228 months

Friday 11th April
quotequote all
PetrolHeadInRecovery said:
Does EV-Database have an error? It lists the unladen weight as a dainty 3085kg: https://ev-database.org/uk/car/2192/Mercedes-Benz-...
525Wh/mile of claimed efficiency so real life use, 600Wh/mile?? Add in winter 700Wh/mile......That massive 110kWh+ battery suddenly seems tiny!!

I thought EVs technology was suppose to be getting better not worse??!!

W4NTED

Original Poster:

761 posts

227 months

Saturday 12th April
quotequote all
samoht said:
Link for the above - https://hansard.parliament.uk/commons/2025-04-02/d...

Hansard said:
These regulations will therefore enable the holder of a standard category B licence to drive a fully electric or hydrogen-powered vehicle up to a maximum weight of 4.25 tonnes
Since category B is the standard car driving licence most people hold, and it refers to 'vehicle' rather than being limited to commercial vehicles, I think that G580 drivers are in the clear.
Good insight thanks mate..love forums great source of info!

SWoll

20,181 posts

271 months

Saturday 12th April
quotequote all
gangzoom said:
PetrolHeadInRecovery said:
Does EV-Database have an error? It lists the unladen weight as a dainty 3085kg: https://ev-database.org/uk/car/2192/Mercedes-Benz-...
525Wh/mile of claimed efficiency so real life use, 600Wh/mile?? Add in winter 700Wh/mile......That massive 110kWh+ battery suddenly seems tiny!!

I thought EVs technology was suppose to be getting better not worse??!!
More than enough to cruise around the roads of Cheshire I'd have thought?

Talking of which, and on the subject of hugely expensive and enormous 3000KG SUV's, I happened to be driving through Knutsford last week and had my first BMW XM sighting. Pictures really don't do it justice, absolutely hideous.
Saturday 12th April
quotequote all
I inquired after them - 6-12 months lead time (so that’ll be 12+ then), as built to order only.

No thanks.

I can half a silly half hour and talk myself into misjudged purchases, like the next person, but the regret timescale there is just too long!

leef44

4,935 posts

166 months

Sunday 13th April
quotequote all
RotorRambler said:
Yes, if ChatGpt is correct:-

“ Yes, the UK is updating its driving licence regulations to accommodate the additional weight of battery electric vehicles (BEVs), particularly benefiting drivers of heavier electric vans and similar vehicles.

New Driving Licence Flexibility for Electric Vehicles

As of April 2025, the UK government has approved changes allowing Category B licence holders (standard car licences) to drive zero-emission vehicles—such as electric or hydrogen-powered vans, minibuses, and SUVs—weighing up to 4.25 tonnes, up from the previous 3.5-tonne limit.

Key updates include:
• Removal of Additional Training: The prior requirement for five hours of extra training to operate these heavier vehicles has been eliminated.
• Expanded Vehicle Types: The new rules extend beyond goods vans to include minibuses, SUVs, and trucks, provided they are zero-emission vehicles.
• Towing Allowance: Drivers can now tow trailers with these vehicles, as long as the combined weight does not exceed 7 tonnes.
• Accessibility Considerations: For vehicles equipped with specialist equipment for disabled passengers, the weight limit increases to 5 tonnes.

Important Notes
• These changes apply only to zero-emission vehicles; traditional fuel vehicles remain subject to the 3.5-tonne limit for Category B licences.
• The updated regulations aim to support the transition to greener vehicles by removing barriers associated with the additional weight of electric powertrains.

These adjustments are expected to facilitate the adoption of electric vehicles by aligning licensing requirements with the realities of electric vehicle weights, thereby promoting environmental goals and reducing administrative burdens for drivers and businesses.



Edited by RotorRambler on Friday 11th April 19:50
It's pathetic that the regulations need to change for this. Such a missed opportunity to turn around and say, no 3500kg is the limit, make your cars lighter. There is no need to encourage private vehicles in excess of this weight.

SWoll

20,181 posts

271 months

Sunday 13th April
quotequote all
leef44 said:
It's pathetic that the regulations need to change for this. Such a missed opportunity to turn around and say, no 3500kg is the limit, make your cars lighter. There is no need to encourage private vehicles in excess of this weight.
Isn't the issue that current vehicles above the 3500KG limit are all commercial and huge at 7m long, 2.5m wide and 3m tall as an example? It makes sense that someone would need specific training to drive one safely as so different to a passenger car.

The Merc is very heavy, but still smaller than a range rover.

Edited by SWoll on Sunday 13th April 07:32

kambites

69,277 posts

234 months

Sunday 13th April
quotequote all
SWoll said:
Isn't the issue that current vehicles above the 3500KG limit are all commercial and huge at 7m long, 2.5m wide and 3m tall as an example? It makes sense that someone would need specific training to drive one safely as so different to a passenger car.

The Merc is very heavy, but still smaller than a range rover.
Perhaps, but allowing private cars to get even heavier still feels like a step in the wrong direction.

SWoll

20,181 posts

271 months

Sunday 13th April
quotequote all
kambites said:
SWoll said:
Isn't the issue that current vehicles above the 3500KG limit are all commercial and huge at 7m long, 2.5m wide and 3m tall as an example? It makes sense that someone would need specific training to drive one safely as so different to a passenger car.

The Merc is very heavy, but still smaller than a range rover.
Perhaps, but allowing private cars to get even heavier still feels like a step in the wrong direction.
The downside of batteries and the seemingly endless demand for more range unfortunately.

At the end of the day you can legally use your 2500KG Defender to tow a 3500KG trailer in the UK with a standard license so weight clearly not the issue?