Introduction: The Badge is Smaller. The Upgrades Are Not.
The 2026 Toyota bZ, previously known by its Wi-Fi password of a name—bZ4X—finally sounds like something a human might say aloud. But the changes aren’t just cosmetic. Underneath the more pronounceable badge sits Toyota’s most serious EV to date, with more range, faster charging, and a few surprises that show the brand is finally loosening its tie in the all-electric arena.
Toyota hasn’t reinvented the wheel. It just made it charge faster, roll farther, and look a whole lot better doing it.
Powertrain and Performance: A Prius This Is Not
Let’s start with something you can brag about at a stoplight.
- AWD models now make 338 horsepower, thanks to upgraded motors and silicon carbide semiconductors. That’s not just engineer-speak—it means about 100 more horses than the 2025 model.
- 0–60 mph drops to 4.9 seconds, so now you can beat your neighbor’s crossover without spilling your coffee.
- FWD versions tone it down slightly with 201 hp, but still benefit from improved efficiency.
If you're wondering, torque hasn’t gone on vacation either. The AWD variant dishes out more punch off the line, making it feel far zippier than you’d expect from something with Toyota badging and an environmentally responsible heart.
Range and Battery: Less Charging, More Doing
Toyota got the memo: range anxiety is about as welcome as a flat tire on a freeway. So, they added a bigger battery.
Trim Level | Battery (kWh) | Drive | Estimated Range (mi) |
---|---|---|---|
XLE FWD | 57.7 | FWD | 236 |
XLE FWD Plus | 74.7 | FWD | 314 |
XLE AWD | 74.7 | AWD | 288 |
Limited FWD | 74.7 | FWD | 299 |
Limited AWD | 74.7 | AWD | 278 |
Yes, that’s 314 miles of range for the most efficient model, up from around 252 miles in 2025. That’s a jump that finally makes Toyota’s EV offering competitive with Tesla’s base Model Y and the Hyundai Ioniq 5.
And the batteries? Still liquid-cooled, still designed in partnership with Panasonic, and still made to last longer than your favorite T-shirt from college.
Charging: Plug It In, Walk Away, Smile Later
Charging shouldn’t feel like setting up a VCR in 1998. Toyota agrees.
- Now compatible with NACS (Tesla’s North American Charging Standard). Translation: You can use Tesla Superchargers without hacking anything.
- Plug & Charge support: No more apps, fobs, or prayer. Plug in, and the car handles billing and authentication.
- Battery pre-conditioning is now standard. The car warms the battery before charging in cold weather, so you don’t spend winter watching electrons crawl like they’re stuck in rush hour.
And yes, Toyota says the AWD model can now charge from 10% to 80% in around 30 minutes with the right charger. That’s just enough time to scroll through your inbox and ignore half of it.