Home / Automobiles / Mazda 6e EV liftback spied in right-hand drive ahead of expected Australian launch

Mazda 6e EV liftback spied in right-hand drive ahead of expected Australian launch


The local launch of the Chinese-built, electric Mazda 6e liftback appears almost inevitable at this point, with a right-hand drive example spied by CarExpert negotiating a roundabout in Sydney.

The latest sighting of the battery-powered successor to the long-running Mazda 6 follows images of what is likely to have been the same car (judging by its Victorian number plate) being shared in a Mazda owner’s group earlier this month – only on that occasion the car was seen in Melbourne.

Although it’s yet to be officially confirmed for Australia, the 6e (known as the EZ-6 in China) has already been locked in for right-hand drive production and will go on sale in Thailand later this year, followed by the UK in 2026.

Multiple Australian sightings suggest that Mazda is not only interested in selling the model locally, but has already begun fine-tuning its software and potentially hardware to suit our notoriously unique driving conditions – something the brand chose to forego with the launch of the widely criticised CX-60 mid-size SUV.

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These latest spy shots don’t reveal anything new about the 6e’s exterior design, which isn’t surprising given the sleek, liftback sedan has already been shown off without camouflage overseas.

We also already have an idea of what to expect under the skin when it arrives in Australian showrooms, as indicated by European specifications. In that market it’s available with a single-motor rear-wheel drive electric powertrain producing up to 190kW of power and 320Nm of torque.

It’s fitted with a standard 68.8kWh lithium iron phosphate (LFP) battery that can be charged at up to 165kW, and offers 479km of range on the WLTP cycle.

There’s also a larger 80kWh nickel-manganese-cobalt (NMC) battery that can only support 90kW DC fast-charging, but offers an increased range of 552km. With this battery, peak power output drops slightly to 180kW.