The 2025 Audi RS e-tron GT – especially the new RS e-tron GT performance – is not just “another fast EV”. It is officially the quickest production Audi ever built, combining brutal electric acceleration with grand tourer comfort, high-end design and the kind of engineering depth that Audi fans expect. According to Audi’s own data, the RS e-tron GT performance delivers up to 912 hp, sprints from 0–60 mph in about 2.4 seconds and uses a new 105 kWh battery with 320 kW DC fast charging capability.
As Mr Audi, let’s unpack what those numbers mean in real life, how the 2025 RS e-tron GT compares to heavy-hitters like the Porsche Taycan Turbo GT, Tesla Model S Plaid and Mercedes-AMG EQE, and who this car is really built for.

The RS e-tron GT is Audi’s all-electric, four-door performance GT. It shares its core platform with the Porsche Taycan – an 800-volt architecture, low-slung battery floor and twin-motor all-wheel drive layout – but wears a distinctly Audi suit and follows Audi’s RS philosophy: huge performance wrapped in something you can genuinely live with every day.
For the 2025 update, Audi has:
The result is a car that’s quicker, charges faster and goes further than the outgoing RS e-tron GT, while keeping the same dramatic stance and cabin feel.
Globally, the 2025 e-tron GT family stacks up roughly like this:
In more familiar terms:
Real-world tests of the RS e-tron GT performance quote 0–100 km/h in about 2.5 seconds, with savage in-gear acceleration – think highway overtakes from 80–120 km/h in around 2 seconds when in the sportiest modes.
The 2025 RS e-tron GT uses Audi’s latest 800-volt battery technology:
In simple terms, if you drive it like a fast GT rather than a drag-race toy, you can realistically plan for:
The big story is not just range, but charging: on a good 320 kW DC charger, 10–80% in about 18 minutes is properly competitive, putting it in the same conversation as the fastest-charging EVs on sale.
On paper, the RS e-tron GT looks like a straight-line monster. On the road, it behaves like a grand tourer first, supercar second.

Most models are fitted with:
In Comfort or Auto, the car rides with surprising compliance for something this heavy and this fast. It feels planted, quiet and relaxed – exactly what you want from a GT on a long run. Switch to the sportier modes and the RS tightens up: body control sharpens, steering weight increases and response from the powertrain becomes instant and aggressive.
The big advantage is the low centre of gravity. With the battery in the floor, the RS e-tron GT resists roll better than many combustion RS models, and together with quattro and rear-wheel steering (where fitted), it can carry serious speed through fast corners while still feeling stable and confidence-inspiring.
You don’t get a V8 soundtrack, but Audi’s synthesised “e-sound” gives a futuristic, mechanical tone that rises with speed and load. It’s more sci-fi than fake exhaust, and you can adjust how prominent it is depending on mood.
At this level, the RS e-tron GT is not fighting ordinary EVs. It’s playing in the deep end with:
The Taycan Turbo GT delivers up to 760 kW, 0–100 km/h in as little as 2.2–2.3 seconds and a top speed up to 305 km/h with the Weissach Package.
It is more track-focused and has just been crowned an EV benchmark in independent tests for both performance and fast charging.
The Model S Plaid offers around 760 kW, 0–100 km/h in roughly 2.1–2.4 seconds (depending on methodology) and an estimated range around 560 km on European testing.
It is brutally fast and very efficient, but more minimalist inside and less focused on traditional European luxury and cabin craftsmanship.
The AMG EQE 53 sits slightly below these in outright fireworks – around the mid-400 kW mark – with a softer, more comfort-biased, luxury-first personality. It’s rapid, but its emphasis is more on refinement than sharp, driver-centric dynamics.
Instead, the Audi carves out a clear niche: a design-led, beautifully finished electric GT that combines supercar performance with a classic Audi RS grand tourer feel.
On paper, WLTP energy consumption for the RS e-tron GT performance sits roughly in the 18.7–20.8 kWh/100 km band, depending on spec and conditions.
In real-world mixed driving, most owners can expect something closer to 21–24 kWh/100 km if they use the performance now and then.
Let’s do a simple annual energy cost example:
If you charge mostly at home or office, your annual “fuel” cost becomes your electricity price multiplied by those 3 300 kWh. Even at relatively high per-kWh rates, that often works out significantly cheaper than feeding a similar-performance RS6 or RS7 on petrol over the same distance.
Maintenance is simpler in some areas – no oil changes or exhaust systems – but you still have:
Compared to a combustion RS of similar output, total running costs can be similar or slightly lower if you mainly home-charge and don’t live at full throttle. But you must budget sensibly for premium tyres and, if optioned, carbon-ceramic brakes.
The 2025 RS e-tron GT is aimed at buyers who:
It suits the customer who might previously have bought an RS7 or a Taycan GTS – someone who wants a car that looks special in the driveway, crushes long trips and can embarrass superbikes in a straight line, but still has four usable seats and everyday practicality.
A few deeper details for the serious car nerds:
The 2025 Audi RS e-tron GT performance is a landmark car for Audi. It’s:
For enthusiasts, what matters is not only the straight-line madness, but how it blends range, charging speed, interior quality, design and cross-country pace into one cohesive package. It’s a car you can use daily, tour across countries in, and still enjoy like an exotic when the road or the mood is right.
If you are considering moving from combustion to electric at the high end of the market, the 2025 Audi RS e-tron GT should be on your shortlist. And as Mr Audi, this is exactly the kind of car we live for – where numbers, engineering and real-world experience meet.
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