Plug-In Hybrid Range Rover: Comfort and Computing Genius Worthy of a Prime Minister

rang rover
PHEV Range Rover Has Mesmerizing Amounts of TechClayton Baime

There are never enough ions these days. Or maybe there are too many ions. Or whatever-ons. Who knows? This becomes clear the moment the Range Rover PHEV starts up. Gauges and a screen spring to life and the Rover measures the air quality inside the cabin and outside of the vehicle, in units PM2.5. Does the cabin need more ionization, before you start moving? For those of us who don’t know what ions are—or the unit PM2.5—who cares? The vehicle knows and is looking after your well-being. It used to be that you could get into a car you’ve never driven and the only thing you needed to figure out before you got rolling was where the keyhole was. Today new cars don’t have keyholes. But they measure ions! Welcome to the new world technocracy.

Our week in a 2023 Land Rover Range Rover PHEV SE SWB—the first model year that the Range Rover line has offered a plug-in hybrid (the new fifth generation)—proved to be more than just a test drive. For those that don't know, that's PHEV as in Plug-In Hybrid Electric Vehicle, SE meaning "standard equipment," and SWB indicating the 118-inch Standard Wheelbase. The vehicle arrived wearing Belgravia green paint with an ebony interior. Our test drive took us over swaths of Northern California roads, some unpaved trails, plus a little beach. The payoff turned out to be not just miles traveled but a lesson in how far the automobile industry is reaching into the digital cosmos to create an otherworldly environment in which the act of travel feels like that last thing that might be considered. There is so much gadgetry, it's almost as if the steering wheel was an afterthought. Not that this vehicle isn't fun to drive. It is.

range rover
Clayton Baime

Base price: $110,500, and the test ride was optioned to $128,475. From its launch in model year 1970, the Range Rover has been the most luxurious, fully off-road capable vehicle money can buy. Whether or not this new Rover stays on top of those two categories remains to be seen. But the initial sensation is overwhelming computerized genius.

Land Rover claims 51 MPGe combined city/highway, and a 51-mile range on pure electric, which doesn’t seem like much until you remember that the average commute is 27.6 minutes, according to Census figures, and roughly half of Americans work from home now at least for a portion of the week. Most drivers who can afford this SUV will have a speedy charger installed in the garage, and, perhaps, solar panels. So it would be possible to motor entirely in electric mode, powered by the sun.

And if a buyer can afford this, he or she can spring for a lot of photovoltaic love.