Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. News

Volkswagen’s I.D. concept can drive itself and receive packages when you’re away

Add as a preferred source on Google

Still dealing with the fumes of Dieselgate, Volkswagen is embarking on a push to add more electric cars to its lineup. In fact, it hopes to sell 1 million of them by 2025.

The I.D. concept — debuting this week at the 2016 Paris Motor Show — will likely put VW a lot closer to that goal. It previews a new electric car the brand hopes to put on sale by 2020, which will be a dedicated model rather than an electric version of an existing one. It will use the MEB platform for small electric cars previewed by VW last year.

Recommended Videos

The car itself looks like a cross between today’s Golf hatchback and a late 1990s iMac. VW tried to emphasize the electric powertrain with styling elements like a grille-less front fascia and a stubby front end, which takes full advantage of the more flexible packaging electric powertrains allow.

Read more: Smart Electric Drive models debut at 2016 Paris Motor Show

In terms of forward motivation, the I.D. uses a 167-horsepower electric motor, and VW claims a range of between 400 and 600 kilometers (248 and 372 miles). However, that’s probably as measured on the European testing cycle, which is known to be a bit unrealistic. Any U.S. EPA range ratings would likely be lower, but would still represent a significant improvement over the current VW e-Golf’s 83-mile rating.

VW also gave the I.D. autonomous driving capabilities, which it says will be available on production cars beginning in 2025. When in autonomous mode (VW calls it “I.D. Pilot”), the steering wheel retracts into the dashboard. The car can also receive packages when its owner isn’t home, something that has already been tested by Volvo in a Swedish pilot program.

The I.D. will launch in 2020 as an electric counterpart to the Golf. Since the Golf is VW’s bestselling car worldwide, that tells us the German automaker has big plans for this compact EV. At any rate, the I.D. will almost certainly be more affordable than the other electric cars the brand has planned for the next few years, a trio of luxury models that includes the PhaetonPorsche Mission E, and an Audi SUV based on last year’s e-tron quattro concept.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
Audi tackles Ferrari Luce fever with the hybrid Nuvolari, it’s fastest and beefiest car ever
Meet the Audi that makes Formula 1 technology street legal.
Audi Nuvolari

Audi has just pulled the wraps off the Nuvolari, its first hybrid supercar, and the numbers are genuinely hard to comprehend. Named after Tazio Nuvolari, one of motorsport's most iconic figures, the car produces 1,001 PS and can reach a top speed of over 350 km/h. Only 499 people will ever get to own one, with deliveries kicking off in the first half of 2027.

The Nuvolari can go from 0 to 100 km/h in 2.6 seconds and can hit the 200 km/h mark in just 6.8 seconds. Under the hood is a 4.0-liter V8 biturbo engine producing 800 hp, paired with three electric motors for a combined system output of 1,001 PS. The electric motors at the front axle alone deliver 2,150 Nm of torque, which is a number that feels almost fictional.

Read more
Electric cars are getting more pocket-friendly globally, except for US buyers
The US EV market's 2025 decline wasn't about consumer disinterest. It was the predictable result of eliminating financial incentives.
Porsche Cayenne Coupe electric

In 2025, one in four cars sold anywhere in the world was electric. However, in the US, that figure is closer to one in ten, and it is not moving in the right direction. 

The falling EV prices globally have pushed sales to record levels. American buyers, on the other hand, are marching through 2026 with fewer incentives, higher prices, and a shrinking selection of affordable options. 

Read more
Lexus halts plans of an electric car based on the stunning LF-ZC concept and it’s such a bummer
Lexus finally designed a gorgeous EV and then sent it to timeout
LF-ZC concept

Toyota and Lexus may have just shelved one of the most exciting electric vehicle concepts shown in recent years. According to reports from Automotive News and Nikkei Asia, Toyota has halted development of the next-generation Lexus EV that was expected to be based on the futuristic LF-ZC concept.

For EV enthusiasts and Lexus fans, the news is particularly disappointing because the LF-ZC represented one of the clearest signs that Lexus was finally preparing to make a serious leap into the premium electric future.

Read more