Yanko Design

XPENG L03 Brings Ex-Ferrari Designer and 520 km Range to Europe

Xpeng picked Munich for the L03’s big moment, and that setting says almost as much as the car itself. Unveiled on July 17, the L03 arrives as a global-facing SUV coupe that mixes sleek design, family-friendly practicality, and a heavy dose of software-first ambition. For Xpeng, it is more than just another model launch. It is a clear statement of intent for Europe.

Xpeng calls the L03 a next-generation AI SUV coupe, and the design leans hard into that promise with a low, flowing roofline, flush detailing, and a drag coefficient of 0.228. Developed by a global design team led by former Ferrari exterior design chief JuanMa López, the L03 is clearly meant to look more polished and aspirational than a typical mainstream family SUV. At 4,650 mm long with a 2,850 mm wheelbase, it sits in a sweet spot that should give it broad appeal across urban buyers, young families, and tech-minded upgraders. Xpeng is also giving buyers a broader visual palette than usual, with five nature-inspired exterior colors: Phantom Purple, Rock Gray, Arctic White, Midnight Black, and Silver Frost, plus a Global Black Edition with full black body color, darkened calipers, and darker wheels.

Designer: Xpeng

Inside, Xpeng is trying to make the L03 feel more lounge than machine. The cabin centers on a 15.6-inch display and layers in 256-color ambient lighting, AI-enabled climate control, and active noise cancellation, while the seating package aims squarely at comfort with ventilated, heated, and massage-equipped front seats. The rear bench folds in a 40/20/40 split, and practicality looks like a genuine strength rather than an afterthought, with 539 liters of rear luggage space including underfloor storage, a 102-liter front trunk on EV variants, and a further 102-liter rear underseat drawer.

That usefulness extends beyond the cabin. Xpeng says the L03 has been designed with expansion and adventure in mind, featuring eight flush magnetic attachment points, five 1/4-inch threaded mounting points for accessories such as action cameras, and front passenger expansion docks for added flexibility. The company also says the system supports roof racks, helping position the L03 as something more versatile than a style-led urban crossover. Towing capacity is rated at up to 1,500 kg with an optional market-specific manual tow hook.

The bigger story, though, is software. Xpeng is using the L03 to showcase its latest XOS 6.0 cockpit platform and a more advanced intelligent driving pitch built around VLA 2.0 and NGP. The L03 also brings direct Google Maps integration, adding a familiar layer of usability to Xpeng’s latest cockpit experience. Xpeng said it plans to bring its next-generation assisted driving technology to Europe in early 2027, making the L03 not just a new model but an early marker for the brand’s next software chapter in the region.

Xpeng is also casting a wide net on powertrain choice. The battery-electric version is rated for up to 520 km of WLTP range, while the EREV version stretches to more than 1,000 km of combined range. Fast charging is another headline figure, with Xpeng claiming a 10 to 80 percent top-up in around 20 minutes under 3C charging conditions. That helps the L03 look less like a niche style play and more like a serious attempt to cover multiple use cases with one global product. With its current pricing, the L03 looks strikingly competitive in Europe, particularly given its range, technology, and day-to-day usability.

Taken together, those elements make the L03 more than just another new model. It is a statement car for a brand that wants to prove it can speak the language of European design, global software, and everyday usability all at once. In Munich, Xpeng did not just unveil a new SUV coupe. It unveiled a model designed to carry its international ambitions much further.

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