After five decades, Volkswagen confirmed the first electric GTI, the ID. Polo GTI will make its debut on Friday, May 15.
When will Volkswagen’s first electric GTI debut?
It’s been almost three years since Volkswagen first unveiled the ID. GTI concept at the IAA Auto Show in September 2023.
This year marks the GTI’s 50th anniversary, and to celebrate, Volkswagen will launch the first all-electric GTI vehicle later this year.
We got a sneak peek of it at last year’s Munich Motor Show after Volkswagen revealed the ID. Polo GTI, a prototype of the upcoming electric hot hatch. The company confirmed at the event that the ID. GTI will go into production later this year as the ID. Polo GTI.
Volkswagen launched the standard ID. Polo in Europe just over a week ago, the first of its new family of entry-level EVs.
Now, it’s preparing for the GTI version. Volkswagen brand design spokesperson Stepan Rehak confirmed the ID. Polo GTI will make its official debut on Friday, May 15, 2026.


Rehak said the EV hot hatch “takes the GTI into the electric future” with a compact, but confident design that’s full of character. He also hinted that the red line across the front grille showcased in the initial sketches will remain on the production ID. Polo GTI.
The ID. Polo GTI will be the most powerful Polo model yet, with a front-mounted electric motor delivering 222 hp (166 kW).
It will use the same 52.2 kWh NMC (nickel-manganese-cobalt) battery as the standard 155 kW ID. Polo variant, which VW said enables a WLTP range of up to 282 miles (484 km).

We knew the electric hot hatch would be available in at least one other variant after a blacked-out prototype was caught testing (via AutoEvolution, shown below) earlier this year. While the near-production model is expected to be an R-Line trim, we are learning that at least one more GTI variant is in the works.
VW’s EV hot hatch will offer Hyundai-like fake shifting
Volkswagen’s head of driving dynamics, Florian Umbach, told Autocar that the company is planning to launch a more powerful “Clubsport” variant.
While details have yet to be revealed, the report suggests the Clubsport model could deliver around 282 hp, up from 223 hp in the standard ID. Polo GTI, citing insider sources.

“We are working on something,” Umbach told Autocar, confirming, “There is certainly more peak power that we can find from the motor and battery hardware that we have, and more torque that the front axle could handle also.”
According to VW’s driving dynamics chief, the company is developing “a similar kind of paddleshift power delivery that the Hyundai N cars have” for the upcoming electric hot hatch.


Hyundai’s performance EVs, including the IONIQ 5 N and IONIQ 6 N, feature a simulated gear-shifting system called N e-Shift that uses paddle shifters on the steering wheel to replicate the feel of an 8-speed dual-clutch transmission. The system works with Hyundai’s N Active Sound+ to make it seem like you’re really shifting gears.
Since the ID. Polo already features a retro mode that transforms the digital cluster to resemble the first-generation (Mk1) Golf, integrating a gear shift system would make sense.
Volkswagen isn’t the only automaker stealing the idea from Hyundai. BMW and Porsche have both said they are looking to introduce fake gear shifting and sounds in upcoming performance EVs.
Volkswagen opened orders for the ID. Polo Life with the 155 kW drive and 52 kWh battery in Germany just over a week ago, starting at 33,795 euros ($40,000).
The base ID. Polo will follow this summer, starting at 24,995 euros ($29,000). We will learn prices closer to launch, but the ID. Polo GTI is expected to start at closer to 38,000 euros ($45,000). The Clubsport model will likely cost around 40,000 euros ($47,000) to 45,000 euros ($53,000).
While the ID. Polo GTI will debut later this week, CEO Thomas Shafer confirmed on Wednesday that Volkswagen is delaying the launch of the electric Golf from 2028 until closer to the end of the decade.
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