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

EV batteries that can charge in just over six minutes are here

CATL just made EV charging faster than your morning coffee run.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Shenxing Superfast Charging Battery
PR Newswire

CATL held its Super Technology Day in Beijing, and if you care about EVs at all, this one is worth paying attention to. As reported by PR Newswire, the company unveiled several new battery technologies, and the headline act is the third-generation Shenxing Superfast Charging Battery.

The numbers are pretty incredible. Charging from 10% to 80% takes 3 minutes and 44 seconds. Charging from 10% to 98% takes 6 minutes and 27 seconds. Even at minus 30 degrees Celsius, the battery can charge from 20% to 98% in about 9 minutes. 

Recommended Videos

For context, that is faster than BYD’s blade battery and Geely’s fast charging technologies. Hell, most people take more time to fill a gas tank and grab a snack than this battery needs to charge.

CATL is also promising that the battery will retain over 90% of its capacity after 1,000 full charging cycles, which addresses the usual trade-off between fast charging and battery longevity.

What else did CATL announce?

CATL did not stop at one announcement. The third-generation Qilin battery targets premium EVs with a cell energy density of 280 Wh/kg and a claimed range of 1,000 km. That should remove any range anxiety EV owners experience. 

The entire battery pack weighs 625 kg, which is 255 kg lighter than comparable systems. According to the company, the weight reduction alone improves braking distance, acceleration, and even tyre life by over 30%.

For hybrid drivers, the second-generation Freevoy Super Hybrid battery extends pure electric range to up to 600 km, with total vehicle range exceeding 2,000 km. And for those in extreme climates, the new Naxtra Sodium-ion battery is finally moving into large-scale production by the end of 2026.

What does this mean for you?

Charging and range anxiety have always been the biggest arguments against switching to an EV. CATL is making it increasingly harder to use that excuse. With fast-charging times approaching gas-station speeds and batteries that can go 1,000 kilometers on a single charge and handle extreme cold, the gap between EVs and traditional cars is getting smaller fast.

CATL plans to build 4,000 integrated charge and swap stations across China by the end of 2026. China has come to the forefront of EV technology advancements, and it’s no wonder US customers want access to their cars.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over seven years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
Porsche reveals an all-electric Cayenne Coupe with a sweet power boost
Porsche Cayenne Coupe electric

The Porsche Cayenne Coupe has established itself as one of the best-selling Porsche cars. The car was first introduced in 2019, and since then, it has seen unprecedented growth in sales. In 2025 alone, it accounted for 40% of all Cayenne sales in the US. Building on the success, Porsche has announced a fully electric model.

The Cayenne Coupe electric gets its signature look from the sloping roofline that Porsche calls the "flyline," a design borrowed from the 911. It sits lower than the standard Cayenne SUV, has a flush rear window, and has a lower drag coefficient of 0.23, making it more efficient. 

Read more
This sleek electric sedan costs under $32,900 and pips Tesla with over 770-mile range
Avatr's sleek 06T sedan EV just dropped with a huge range flex
Avatr 06T Smart Sports Sedan in two colors

Avatr has launched the 06T in China, and the numbers are the first thing that grabs you. The sleek electric sedan starts at ¥219,900, which is about $32,000, and brings some surprisingly premium specs. For that money, buyers are getting a car packed with Huawei tech, a premium-looking cabin, and a headline range claim that easily clears the 700-mile mark in its range-extender form.

Why this number is a big deal

Read more
One of China’s buzziest EV makers hopes to deliver flying cars next year
We could be seeing flying cars as early as next year.
The Xpeng LAC air module is displayed at CES 2025.

Xpeng, one of the hottest Chinese EV makers, is reaching for the skies, literally. The company is hoping that its flying cars could start reaching customers soon. While this already sounds like science fiction, Xpeng has already started talking about orders, approvals, and mass production.

When can we expect these flying cars to hit the sky?

Read more