For decades, the Lexus ES has existed in a comfortable little bubble. Buyers loved it because it was quiet, reliable, spacious, and almost aggressively committed to not upsetting anyone. It wasn’t sporty, it wasn’t especially daring, and if you asked enthusiasts about it, many would respond with a shrug and a comment about retirement communities.
That wasn’t really criticism either. Lexus knew exactly what the ES was and, more importantly, who it was for. The formula worked so well that the brand had little reason to mess with it. Why reinvent a luxury sedan that’s spent years quietly printing money? Now Lexus says it’s broadened the ES formula.
Read: The First Electric Lexus ES Actually Costs Less Than The Hybrid
After driving the all-new 2026 ES lineup around San Diego, including the ES 350h AWD hybrid, ES 350e, and range-topping ES 500e AWD, there’s evidence the company wasn’t just tossing around marketing jargon. The eighth-generation ES is a big change. It’s literally larger in every direction, rides on a new multi-pathway architecture supporting both hybrid and EV variants, and, for the first time ever, gets fully electric versions.
That also created an unusual challenge for this review. The new ES is really two different cars wearing nearly identical sheet metal. One relies on Lexus’ latest hybrid system while the other embraces full electrification, and they deliver very different experiences from behind the wheel. So rather than force them into one giant blended driving section, we’re splitting that section of this review into two. One set of impressions for the hybrid and another for the EVs.
QUICK FACTS
SWIPE
Because after spending a day hopping between all three variants, one thing became clear: they may look nearly identical, and sitting in them produces the same vibe… but they absolutely don’t feel identical once you’re moving. So did Lexus finally build an ES with some personality? Or is this just a modernized appliance for those who don’t really love driving to begin with? Read on to find out.
Styling
Aside from actual ES owners and sincere fans, most folks probably couldn’t provide many details about what the ES generations look like from one to the next. Most blended into traffic so effectively that you could probably lose one in a Costco parking lot within minutes. Not this one.
The new ES genuinely looks striking. During our drive, it repeatedly turned heads and, at one point, one distracted Mazda driver seemed more interested in staring at the Lexus than the road ahead. That’s anecdotal, sure, but the point stands. People noticed it.
The side profile is dominated by an enormous character strake that feels very Lexus. It very much reminds me of the Maxwell tape ad “Blown Away Guy.” Some people are going to hate it. Others will love it. That’s okay. Lexus has spent years pushing design further than Toyota, and it continues doing exactly that here.
The hood itself is wild too. There are creases and surfacing details piled on top of more creases and surfacing details. Exhibit should pop out any moment, asking if we wanted creases on our creases. Depending on your taste, it’ll either feel bold or overworked. It’s probably one of the many touches Lexus is using to make this look as far afield from a Toyota product as it can.
The rear, meanwhile, is where things come together best. The Blade-style taillight treatment works, the proportions are cleaner than before, and the trunk opens surprisingly wide. Useful details still matter in a sedan like this. Dimensionally, this thing has grown significantly too. Wheelbase stretches to 116.1 inches, while total length swells to 202.4 inches.
Cabin Appointments
The cabin immediately creates a strong first impression. The seats are excellent. Bolstering is good, thigh support is good, visibility is good, and the seating position doesn’t leave you perched awkwardly high like some modern luxury vehicles (especially electrified ones). Add in the massage functionality, and long highway drives should be easy work.
Fit and finish are generally impressive, too. This isn’t a flagship, but that doesn’t mean that Lexus suddenly abandoned quality. Panel fit felt mature and well-sorted. The available bamboo trim also deserves praise. It looks genuinely interesting and, importantly, it’s real material rather than some totally fake printed substitute. Luxury trims get illuminated bamboo layering integrated into the cabin design as well.
Of course, then you start touching things, and a few cracks begin to appear.
For example, the look of the HVAC controls is nice. It’s uniform, simple, and most importantly, we’re talking about physical buttons. But Lexus hid them all under a long rubberized panel. It feels a lot like (and I realize very few ES buyers will get this reference) the texture of gaming controller stalks. That’s all well and good, but only to a point.
Since everything lives on one strip and relies almost entirely on symbols, you still glance down to make sure you’re pressing the right thing. Worse, if one switch fails, replacing it means replacing or, at very least, removing a much larger assembly. Plenty of buyers won’t care because they’ll sell before the warranty runs out, but it’s worth considering for second or third buyers and especially beyond.
The steering wheel buttons don’t help. Some feel oddly cheap for a Lexus, and the infotainment volume knob looks expensive while somehow feeling… not expensive.
Thankfully, the infotainment system itself provides no real reason for anything but praise. Every ES gets a 14-inch touchscreen and a 12.3-inch digital driver display. The screen is bright, responsive, and fairly intuitive once you learn your way around it. The Mark Levinson 17-speaker system absolutely rips, too.
Rear seat buyers get interesting options too. The Executive Package adds heated, ventilated, and massaging rear seats plus a deployable ottoman on the passenger side. That’s delightfully weird and surprisingly cool. Lexus says buyers get 13.3 cubic feet of cargo space, which is fine for the class. The extra length of this car really goes toward rear-seat comfort over all else. From that standpoint, it’s a clear winner, as at 6’6”, my head only grazed the roof and my legs had space for days.
Driving Impressions
ES 350h
First and foremost, let’s focus on the ES 350h. The hybrids will no doubt be the volume sellers here. Lexus imagines that 80 percent of buyers will pick the hybrid, and it’s easy to see why. It’s the tech that most are familiar with, and the two versions couldn’t be much more different when it comes to range and performance.
The ES 350h uses a 2.5-liter four-cylinder hybrid setup producing 244 hp (182 kW), a CVT, and offers up to 46 mpg combined in FWD form. Lexus also says the range exceeds 600 miles. Our test car started the day with 629 miles of predicted range. That’s outstanding and makes this a genuine highway mile crusher for those who regularly take longer drives.
Those who opt for the AWD version won’t give up much in fuel economy either. It gets up to 44 mpg, but keep in mind that performance doesn’t really change. The FWD version does 0-60 mph in 7.3 seconds, while the AWD gets an electric motor for the rear axle and does the same sprint in 7.1 seconds. Those figures are acceptable, but far from what the average enthusiast will consider reasonable.
First Look: Lexus’ New TZ Trades Fake Ruggedness For Quiet Luxury
Around town, the ES is dialed in. It’s comfortable, quiet, composed, and just a pleasant place to spend time. I’d stop short of saying that it feels particularly nimble or playful, but it doesn’t feel clumsy, dopey, or disappointing. While the steering verges on overly light, the pedal feedback deserves real praise. It’s easy to get hybrid braking systems wrong, but Lexus absolutely nailed it here. Modulating the brakes on what starts out as a harder braking event is easy enough that you can finish that same event with a deft and subtle touch easily.
There’s only one problem that really stands out, but it only pops up under one circumstance, and to solve it, there’s a simple fix. Never ever drive the EV.
ES 350e / ES 500e
Back when we tested the BMW i5 and its gas-powered counterparts, we noted something unique. The gas-burners felt decidedly more fun to drive because, while they weren’t as quick, they were so much lighter that chucking them around was more engaging. Somehow, Lexus has done the exact opposite here. If anything, the EVs feel more playful, but that’s not why hybrid buyers need to stay away.
The problem is that the EVs are so quiet that the hybrid feels abnoxiously loud after driving them back to back. Don’t get us wrong. The hybrids aren’t actually loud in the grand scheme of things. But adding a relatively unrefined efficiency-focused four-cylinder to a CVT and lengthy acceleration times for things like getting on the highway, and these two are in different leagues when it comes to interior noise.
Recentering on the driving experience itself, the ES 350e starts with 221 hp (167 kW), front-wheel drive, and up to 307 miles of range. It reaches 60 mph in 7.4 seconds. That’s right, a modern automaker just built an EV that’s slower than its hybrid equivalent. Leave it to Lexus, I guess. From behind the wheel, though, it’s surprisingly good. Obviously, the throttle response is far more direct.
The steering and braking are similar to the hybrid, but it’s worth noting that there’s no simple one-pedal driving setting. Instead, Lexus allows drivers to increase or decrease regenerative braking via pedals. That’s nice, but one-pedal driving is even nicer for those who prefer it.
The ES 500e is the real winner here. Its dual-motor setup pumps out 338 hp (252 kW) and launches to 60 mph in 5.1 seconds. This is the one for drivers. Acceleration hits hard down low. It feels punchy, nimble in traffic, and more premium because it actually feels like Lexus wanted to compete dynamically.
Even then, this still feels slightly conservative. Like Lexus got halfway toward building a true German sports sedan rival and then eased off. Still, if I had to choose? Easy. I’d charge at home and buy the ES 500e. NACS charging capability only sweetens the deal.
Competition
Pricing is where the new ES starts making a strong argument. The hybrid lineup begins at just over $51,000, while the EV range spans from roughly $49,000 for the ES 350e to just over $60,000 for a loaded ES 500e AWD Luxury. That’s notable because key rivals often start much higher. A BMW i5 begins around $68,500, while the Mercedes E-Class starts in the mid-$60,000 range before options begin their inevitable attack on your wallet.
Then there are the numbers. The ES 350h offers up to 46 mpg combined and over 600 miles of estimated range, while the EVs deliver between 272 and 307 miles depending on trim and wheel choice. The ES 500e also puts down 338 hp (252 kW) and reaches 60 mph in 5.1 seconds, making it quick enough to stay in the conversation even if it won’t embarrass German rivals at a stoplight.
The difference is philosophy. BMW and Mercedes still prioritize performance and prestige. Lexus seems content offering a quieter, less complicated luxury experience that also happens to cost thousands less. Whether that’s enough depends entirely on what you want out of a luxury sedan.
The Verdict
The old ES formula worked because Lexus understood exactly what its buyers wanted. It wasn’t a big flagship sedan, and it wasn’t a tight compact sports sedan either. This new one adds a little more spice without completely abandoning the script. The hybrid remains the rational choice.
But the EVs, especially the ES 500e, finally inject some personality into a sedan that spent years avoiding it. Lexus broadened the ES. I just wish it had gone a little further. Thankfully, this is just the start of the generation. There’s plenty of time left for an ES 500e F. Note that we didn’t say “F-Sport.” Hope Lexus is listening.















