- With the UX gone, the RZ stands as Lexus’s sole EV.
- The UX 300e used a modest 54.3 kWh battery pack.
- That small battery capped range at just 186 miles.
The all-electric Lexus UX 300e has quietly shuffled off the UK stage, five years after it first plugged in, and this is not just a local goodbye. Its exit is part of a wider wind-down across several global markets. The model’s demise means Lexus no longer has a small, relatively affordable EV available, and there’s no word on whether anything is in the works to replace it.
UK media first spotted that the UX 300e had vanished from the brand’s online configurator, which naturally sparked a round of speculation. Lexus soon confirmed the car had been removed from sale in late 2025.
Read: Lexus Can’t Even Pretend To Care About The 2026 UX
Lexus offered no detailed explanation for pulling the plug, reports Auto Express. Slow sales seem the obvious culprit, coupled with the fact that the car was beginning to feel its age. Fewer than 3,400 examples were sold in Britain from launch to the end, which is not quite the breakout success you would hope for in a rapidly expanding EV market.
Never That Impressive
The regular UX soldiers on and is still a decent, if aging, option. The UX 300e, though, felt compromised from day one. Its 54.3 kWh battery delivered a rated 186 miles (300 km), which was underwhelming even at launch and quickly became difficult to justify. Then there was the CHAdeMo connector, once championed by the first-generation Nissan Leaf but now largely sidelined by the rest of the industry. Not a great combination if you were hoping for future-proof.
The UK isn’t the only market where the UX 300e has recently been cancelled. In mid-2025, it was also pulled from sale in Australia, likely also due to slow sales. It was also very expensive, starting at AU$80,720 ($56,500) and topping out at AU$88,190 ($61,800), making it more than AU$30,000 ($21,000) more expensive than some new Chinese rivals that offer similar levels of luxury and refinement but better driving ranges and charging speeds.
As Autoblog reported, the same pattern has played out elsewhere, with the electric version being discontinued across parts of Europe and Japan without much fanfare.
The demise of the UX 300e leaves the larger RZ as Lexus’s only current EV. The Japanese firm is planning other EVs, most notably its own version of the new Toyota Highlander, positioned as a large, expensive three-row SUV.
