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VW’s ID 4 EV is Now Assembled in Chattanooga


What’s happening

VW has begun assembly of its all-electric SUV on US shores.

Why it matters

This should help improve supply while also bringing more jobs to Tennessee.

What’s next

A cheaper, smaller-battery flavor of the ID 4 is due next year.

If you’re the type of consumer who gives priority to US-made products, as of today you can add Volkswagen’s ID 4 to the list. Well, to the list of products assembled in the US, anyway. VW today delivered on its long-pledged promise to bring EV production to its Chattanooga, TN factory, with the first cars rolling off the line now ahead of anticipated October deliveries. It joins other American-assembled EVs like Tesla’s sedans and SUVs, GM’s Bolt family, the Nissan Leaf and the upcoming Cadillac Lyriq.

Plans for this were announced way back in the beginning of 2019, with VW making an $800M investment into its Chattanooga facility to enable production of what back then was still called the ID Crozz. Today, US-made ID 4s will use components “mainly” sourced from North America, including Alabama steel and Georgia battery packs from SK Innovation. 

Something had to go to make room for ID 4 production, and sadly that something was the Passat. VW’s venerable sedan was just one of many four-doors put to pasture over the past few years as consumers demand more and more crossover SUVs. With that, Chattanooga becomes the sixth facility globally capable of producing VW’s MEB-based EVs, a platform that includes the not-for-US ID 3 and the long-awaited ID Buzz

First flavors of ID 4 built in the US will be all- or rear-wheel-drive with the larger 82-kilowatt-hour battery pack. The promised, more affordable, 62 kWh version is still on target for next year. No pricing on that yet, but we’re hoping it’ll fall somewhere in the mid-$30k range. 

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