Skip to main content

With 671 hp and physics-defying handling, Mercedes-AMG’s C63 is not your average plug-in

2025 Mercedes-AMG C63 S E Performance front quarter view.
Stephen Edelstein/Digital Trends

If you want the most technology in your performance car, look no further than the 2025 Mercedes-AMG C63 S E Performance, a plug-in hybrid super sedan that’s as complex as its name is long.

Plug-in hybrids like the C63 are how Mercedes’ legendary AMG performance division aims to achieve modern performance while it continues to develop the tech for true high-performance EVs. While it still burns some gasoline, the 2025 C63 is a big improvement over its predecessor in terms of efficiency, swapping a thirsty V8 engine for one with half the cylinders that’s assisted by electric power.

Recommended Videos

Car enthusiasts will be feeling a sense of déjà vu because this is the same powertrain used in the GLC63 S E Performance crossover SUV, which is also new for 2025. Mercedes actually announced the C63 first, but the nature of media event scheduling means we drove the GLC63 earlier — and found it to be impressive, but puzzling. But, as a sedan, the C63 has the advantages of a lower center of gravity and less weight, giving the plug-in hybrid powertrain and its attendant driver aids a better chance to win our hearts.

Design and interior

2025 Mercedes-AMG C63 S E Performance interior.
Stephen Edelstein/Digital Trends

The C63 bulks up the styling of the current-generation Mercedes-Benz C-Class, which arrived for the 2022 model year, but hasn’t been offered with a plug-in option until now. Ribs in the hood recall past Mercedes sports cars. The fenders are pushed out, and larger front air intakes hint at the hardcore hardware beneath the skin. In the best AMG tradition, it’s a subtle update of a handsome sedan that can still fly under the radar.

AMG tradition also dictates that cars maintain the luxurious interior appointments of the models they’re based on. As with the exterior styling, the C-Class was a good base. Its inclined dashboard is topped by large air vents, seat-adjustment controls float off the door panels on their own little islands, and touches like 64-color ambient lighting makes the interior feel special. The only hint that the C63 starts out as a cheaper model is some of the plastic used for the lower parts of the dash.

It’s a subtle update of a handsome sedan that can still fly under the radar.

AMG-specific upgrades include sport seats that add more bolstering for aggressive cornering, without sacrificing comfort. They come standard with artificial leather and microfiber upholstery, but Nappa leather is also available. The AMG steering wheel looked a bit big at first, but it still allows for the full range of motion without the driver inadvertently elbowing themself in the gut.

The C-Class is still considered a compact luxury sedan, but it’s not a small vehicle. Interior space is comparable to rival sedans, and a wide center console separates the driver and front passenger for an added feeling of spaciousness. The mechanically similar AMG GLC63 S E Performance offers even more space thanks to its crossover body shell, but only very tall people will need it.

Tech, infotainment, and driver assist

2025 Mercedes-AMG C63 S E Performance touchscreen.
Stephen Edelstein/Digital Trends

The C63 comes standard with an 11.9-inch central touchscreen and 12.3-inch digital instrument cluster supported by the Mercedes-Benz User Experience (MBUX) operating system used in the automaker’s other current models. MBUX includes wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, as well as native voice recognition. Upgrading from the base C63 to the Pinnacle models adds augmented-reality navigation and a head-up display.

Despite the elevated price tag, this infotainment system is essentially the same as what you get in non-AMG C-Class models. If you’re buying a C63, you’re paying for performance, not more screens. But there isn’t anything wrong with this system, either. The physical layout recalls Mercedes’ flagship S-Class and the graphics and responsiveness give the interface a premium feel. The main touchscreen is easy to navigate, in part because Mercedes opts for tiles instead of endless menus, and the available augmented reality feature for the navigation system overlays arrows on a video feed, so it’s less likely that you’ll miss your turn. The C63 also upgrades to a Burmester 3D surround-sound system.

If you’re buying a C63, you’re paying for performance, not more screens.

The C63 does get some hybrid-specific displays to help keep track of how the battery pack’s charge is being used, plus steering-wheel controls for drive modes, artificial sound enhancement, stability control, and the level of regenerative braking. They’re meant as a less-distracting alternative to the touchscreen, but we found memorizing their functions difficult and were thus never quite sure if we were increasing the level of regenerative braking or decreasing the level of stability control.

Most driver aids are bundled into an optional Driver Assistance Package. This includes adaptive cruise control with stop-and-go and automated lane change functionality, blind-spot monitoring (which will also try to nudge the car back into its lane if it detects another vehicle in the blind spot), lane keep assist, automatic emergency braking, and forward collision warning, among other features.

Driving experience

2025 Mercedes-AMG C63 S E Performance front view.
Stephen Edelstein/Digital Trends

Mercedes gives engineering nerds a lot to process, starting with the C63’s 2.0-liter turbocharged four-cylinder engine. It makes 469 horsepower and 402 pound-feet of torque by itself — the highest output of any series-production four-cylinder engine, Mercedes claims. Itfeatures a small electric motor to keep its turbo spooled up, and is connected to a nine-speed automatic transmission.

The electrified half of the powertrain comprises an electric motor that powers the rear axle via its own two-speed transmission and a limited-slip differential. It’s powered by a 6.1-kilowatt-hour battery pack also mounted toward the back of the car for better weight distribution. Mercedes claims a nearly identical 49%/51% front/rear weight split, although overall curb weight is a depressing 4,817 pounds. Electric input brings total system output to 671 horsepower and 752 pound-feet of torque — 168 hp and 236 pond-feet more than the last C63 generated with a 4.0-liter twin-turbocharged V8.

The C63 will please anyone who simply wants to go fast.

This also makes the C63 vastly more powerful than its closest rival, the BMW M3 Competition, which extracts 523 hp and 479 lb-ft of torque (with the optional all-wheel drive system) from a 3.0-liter twin-turbo inline-six without a hybrid system. That doesn’t make a big difference on paper, though, as Mercedes’ estimated 3.3-second zero-to-60 mph time makes the new C63 just 0.5 second quicker than its predecessor, and only 0.1 second quicker than what BMW claims for the M3. That’s still very quick, though, and impressive considering that Mercedes achieved this performance with a smaller engine than its archnemesis BMW.

The chassis is as complex as the powertrain, with adaptive suspension, rear-axle steering, and a sophisticated all-wheel drive system helping to manage the power and combat the C63’s copious poundage. The resulting driving experience may not be to the liking of traditional car enthusiasts, but will please anyone who simply wants to go fast. A car this heavy and this powerful should be difficult to manage, but all you need to do is point it in the right direction and trust that the technology will do its thing. We did feel a bit isolated from what the car was doing, though, which is always the case when a car leans this heavily on chassis tech.

A performance car first, a plug-in hybrid second

2025 Mercedes-AMG C63 S E Performance front quarter view.
Stephen Edelstein/Digital Trends

Official fuel economy and electric range ratings weren’t available at press time, but these were not the priority for the Mercedes-AMG engineering team. Mercedes estimates only eight miles of electric range when the C63 is driven conservatively. And while EV range is available up to 81 mph, it’s hard to use it consistently without waking up the gasoline engine.

Drive the C63 like it was designed to be driven on a road with lots of hills, and the engine and aggressive regenerative braking settings will actually do a good job of charging the battery pack — a trick the German automakers have mastered. However, that’s really helpful only if your favorite driving road is located next to main thoroughfares clogged with traffic. That admittedly was the case in Malibu, California, where we test drove the C63.

How DT would configure this car

2025 Mercedes-AMG C63 S E Performance rear quarter view.
Stephen Edelstein/Digital Trends

Pricing for this wunder sedan starts at $85,050, putting it above most rivals. The $87,100 Pinnacle trim level adds augmented reality navigation, a head-up display, and digital light projections, while the $1,950 Driver Assistance Package is necessary to get the full array of driver aids, so you’re looking at $89,050 just to check all of the tech-related boxes.

Mercedes hadn’t released pricing for the mechanically similar GLC63 S E Performance at press time, but expect to pay a premium for that SUV. While the two models feature the same high-tech powertrain, we feel the low-slung C63 is better to drive. The lower center of gravity offered by a sedan really makes a difference. The C63 is also cheaper than the all-electric Mercedes-AMG EQE sedan and avoids that car’s polarizing styling.

In the C63 S E Performance, returning AMG customers will find impressive engineering and everyday usability. But new car shoppers who want a sports sedan have a lot of other options. The C63’s traditional rivals, cars like the BMW M3 and Cadillac CT4-V Blackwing, offer a more engaging driving experience for less money. And while it isn’t as quick in a straight line, the Lucid Air Pure is a better fun-per-dollar proposition for shoppers ready to make the leap to an EV.

For now, AMG’s latest plug-in hybrid is a bridge between the combustion cars of today and the performance EVs of the future. It will go down in history as a remarkable engineering achievement, but whether it’s as fondly remembered by driving enthusiasts as past AMG sedans remains to be seen.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
Mercedes-Benz EQE SUV first drive review: ’90s look, cutting-edge tech
Front three quarter view of the 2023 Mercedes-Benz EQE SUV.

Mercedes-Benz is one of the oldest automakers in existence, but it's been among the quickest to launch a lineup of electric cars. It may not have the freshness of a startup, but what it does have are actual cars to sell to customers.

The 2023 Mercedes-Benz EQE SUV is the middle child of Mercedes' electric SUV lineup, slotting between the entry-level EQB and the flagship EQS SUV, and targeting electric luxury SUVs like the Audi E-Tron, BMW iX, and Cadillac Lyriq. Like the EQS, the EQE SUV is based on an existing sedan, hence the "SUV" suffix. In a previous first drive, we found the EQE sedan to be a good balance between luxury and livability, giving the SUV version a lot to live up to.

Read more
We need more 7-passenger EVs, but the 2023 Mercedes EQS SUV has room to improve
Front three quarter view of the 2023 Mercedes-Benz EQS SUV.

Mercedes-Benz is continuing to expand its EV lineup, this time with a model aimed at (wealthy) families.
As the name states, the 2023 Mercedes-Benz EQS SUV is an SUV derivative of the EQS sedan. With the EQS sedan positioned as the electric analog to the Mercedes S-Class, the EQS SUV is the electric version of the GLS-Class. And like that vehicle, the EQS SUV is available with up to seven seats across three rows.
That makes the EQS SUV an important vehicle not just for Mercedes, but for the cause of EV adoption in general. While the Tesla Model X and Rivian R1S also offer three rows for family-hauling duty, there’s a lot more room in the market for another entry. Given the popularity of equivalent gasoline luxury SUVs like the GLS, Land Rover Range Rover, and Cadillac Escalade, the EQS SUV arrives not a moment too soon.
The EQS SUV is scheduled to reach U.S. dealerships this fall in three guises. The base rear-wheel-drive EQS 450+ starts at $105,550 with destination, while the all-wheel drive EQS 450 4Matic and EQS 580 4Matic start at $108,550 and $127,100, respectively. Although it will be built in Alabama, the EQS SUV won’t qualify for the revised federal EV tax credit because it exceeds the $80,000 price cap for SUVs.

Design and interior
A defining feature of Mercedes’ EQ lineup is aerodynamic bodywork aimed at maximizing range. The typical SUV is not aerodynamically ideal, but Mercedes managed to achieve an impressively low drag coefficient for an SUV — at 0.26, it’s close to the Toyota Prius. But function clearly took precedence over form. Mercedes deserves credit for not going in the polarizing direction BMW did with its two-row iX SUV, but the EQS SUV looks like a melting scoop of ice cream.
More disappointing is the third row, which should be the EQS SUV’s defining feature, but seems more like a useless afterthought. Adults will find it difficult to insert themselves into the third-row seats, let alone tolerate riding in them. As in most three-row vehicles, the rear seats also pretty much eliminate cargo space. And if you want to fold them down to create more cargo room, you’ll have to do it manually as Mercedes didn’t include a power-folding system — a bit disappointing for a six-figure car. The EQS SUV also lacks a frunk; like the EQS sedan, the hood is sealed.
The EQS SUV looks like a melting scoop of ice cream.

Read more
Lux and refreshingly livable, Mercedes’ EQE moves EVs mainstream
Front three quarter view of the 2023 Mercedes-Benz EQE sedan.

Mercedes-Benz wants its EQ sub-brand to be an all-electric counterpart to its current lineup of gasoline luxury cars, and it’s working toward that goal by starting at opposite ends of the price spectrum and working toward the middle.
Where the EQS sedan and SUV are the flagships of the lineup, and the EQB serves as an entry-level offering, the 2023 Mercedes-Benz EQE sedan aims for the middle of the market. It’s pitched as an electric equivalent of the Mercedes E-Class, one of the automaker’s bread-and-butter models. And like the E-Class, the EQE will compete against sedans from Mercedes’ German rivals, such as the Audi e-tron GT, BMW i4, and Porsche Taycan. It will likely be cross-shopped against the Genesis Electrified G80, Lucid Air, and Tesla Model S as well.
The EQE sedan arrives at U.S. dealerships in late 2022 in four guises: base rear-wheel drive EQE 350+, all-wheel drive EQE 350 4Matic and EQE 500 4Matic, and an AMG EQE performance version. Mercedes hasn’t disclosed pricing for any of these models, but the EQE 350 4Matic we tested for this first drive will likely be a mid-tier trim level. Like its EQS sibling, the EQE will also get an SUV variant, which will launch sometime after the sedan version.

Design and interior
The EQE has the same lozenge-like shape as the EQS sedan, which is dictated by aerodynamics. The appeal of the design is up for debate, but the smooth shape reduces aerodynamic drag, which helps improve efficiency and range. Under the skin, the EQE is also based on the same EVA2 architecture as the EQS sedan.
But while the two EQ sedans look similar at first glance, the EQE is a bit smaller than its sibling. It’s 10.6 inches shorter than the EQS sedan, with a 3.5-inch shorter wheelbase. Rear-seat passengers might notice the difference, but like its gasoline E-Class counterpart, the EQE is aimed more at drivers than passengers. Its tidier proportions were also a bit more pleasing to our eyes, making the EQE look sleeker than its sibling.
The interior design is minimalist while still maintaining functionality.

Read more