Volvo quietly did something smart with the EX30 refresh: instead of just tweaking what existed, they widened the door. A new entry powertrain — 110kW, 51kWh battery, around 211 miles of range — now sits at the bottom of the lineup for buyers who don’t need to squeeze every mile out of a charge.
Bump up to the 69kWh pack and you’re looking at closer to 296 miles. The Cross Country variant got some love too, adding a Plus trim and a single-motor option that’s easier on the wallet and the battery.
Step inside and it actually feels different this time
Step inside and it actually feels different this time. The ‘Harvest’ interior is all warm tones and recycled textile upholstery — the kind of cabin that makes a grey Tuesday commute feel slightly less grim. The ‘Black’ room goes full contrast: dark Nordico upholstery, flax décor, clean lines throughout.
The Black Edition itself now comes in three colors — Onyx Black, Vapour Grey, and Crystal White — which, if you’re going blacked out, are exactly the shades you’d want.
V2L — Vehicle-to-Load — is the feature worth lingering on. Hook up an adapter and the EX30 can charge an e-bike, run a speaker system, power tools on a job site, or keep the camping gear alive well past sundown. It’s coming as a free over-the-air update this summer, and existing owners get it too.

The power bank thing is genuinely cool
The redesigned settings system also lands the same way — rebuilt controls, a customizable content bar — no trip to the dealership required.
Two days before all this good news dropped, Volvo announced a recall covering 40,323 EX30s — model years 2024 through 2026, Single-Motor Extended Range and Twin-Motor Performance — over batteries that can overheat when charged too high and, in the worst case, catch fire. US owners are affected.
Park outside, charge to 70% maximum, wait for Volvo to replace the battery modules at no cost. For a brand that practically invented the idea of car safety as a selling point, the timing stings. But they’re fixing it, and they’re not charging for it — so there’s that.
Volvo hasn’t mentioned the official pricing or availability of the new model in its press release. It’s worth noting that the current single-motor extended range version of the EX30, with up to 261 miles of claimed range, is available for $40,345. Naturally, a model with a smaller battery and range should cost lesser.






