Lotus Emeya Review: British, Electric, and Brutally Fast
We drove the Lotus Emeya on the roads of Kozhikode, and it feels like nothing else currently on sale in India. Not even close. A 905 hp electric hyper GT that turns every head on every street it passes through, the question going in was simple: does the Emeya live up to what it promises, or is it just a very expensive piece of theatre?
After spending time behind the wheel on real Indian roads, the answer is this: the car is far more than its numbers suggest, and the numbers are already extraordinary.
Design: Aerodynamics Worn as Art
The Emeya doesn’t just look dramatic. Every surface is doing aerodynamic work, and that discipline gives it a beauty that feels earned rather than styled.
Sharp, aggressive front face with split LED lighting running across two separate sections
Bonnet sculpting is designed to channel air with purpose, not just look good
3-litre front storage compartment hidden beneath the bonnet
Carbon fibre lip spoiler integrated into the front end
LIDAR and radar sensors are mounted throughout, visible but elegantly incorporated
22-inch aerodynamic alloy wheels with carbon fibre inserts
Flush door handles that pop out on approach
Frameless doors front and rear, both electrically operated with obstacle sensing
Coupe roofline slopes rearwards in proper GT fashion
Factory privacy glass standard from the factory, no aftermarket film required
Proximity sensor at the rear detects approach and triggers unlock
Wider 305/30 rear tyres on 22-inch rims
Adjustable rear spoiler with three positions, which also rises automatically with speed for downforce
Full carbon fibre rear diffuser, structural and functional
700-litre boot in five-seat configuration, reduced to around 500 litres in four-seat spec
The Emeya is long at over 5.2 metres and wide at over 2.1 metres. On the road, that mass presence is something else entirely. Every single person we passed stopped and stared, regardless of age.
Interior: Technology That Earns Its Place
Step inside, and the Emeya wraps around you in a way that immediately communicates this is not a car built for ordinary commuting.
Screen central layout with all major controls handled digitally
Physical buttons retained for climate control, lock and unlock, and drive mode selection
Sporty centre console flows from dashboard to rear in one continuous island structure
Head-up display standard
Dedicated driver instrument strip with all essential information in one readable line
Flat-bottomed, non-round steering wheel with paddle shifters for regeneration adjustment
High-quality leather throughout with quality stitching and impressive fit and finish
Carbon fibre trim pieces throughout the cabin
Adjustable cup holders with a lock and release mechanism
Cooled storage compartment for drinks, accessible via touch button
Electrically adjustable and ventilated front seats with heating and cooling
Four-seat configuration with individual rear captain chairs as standard, bench option available for five seat setup
Rear touchscreen on the centre console island for passenger controls
Large panoramic electrochromic roof that switches from opaque to clear either section by section or all at once
This technology was first introduced in the 1997 Mercedes Maybach concept, and seeing it here in a production car remains genuinely impressive
Speaker design integrated into the headliner is unique and beautiful in its own right
The card key system must be placed in the designated slot to enable drive mode
The grey interior of our test car was understated but deeply attractive. The overall feel is closer to a luxury yacht than a sports car, which, for a grand tourer, is exactly right.
Performance and Drive: Where Words Run Out
This is where Emeya separates itself from everything else in India right now.
905 hp and 975 Nm of torque from a dual motor all-wheel drive setup
0 to 100 kmph in 2.7 seconds, which is hypercar territory
80 to 150 kmph takes just 1.8 seconds
Air suspension with ride height adjustment, raises for city use, lowers automatically above a set speed
Multiple drive modes, including an efficiency mode for relaxed everyday use
Adjustable regenerative braking via the paddle shifters
ADAS hardware already fitted, upgradeable to Level 4 autonomy via over-the-air updates when regulations permit
Key impressions from our drive:
Push the accelerator, and the sensation is unlike anything on Indian roads today, completely unmatched
At 2.5 tonnes, the car still launches with a ferocity that feels unreasonable and wonderful at the same time
Noise insulation is exceptional, with very little wind noise or road noise filtering through
No artificial sound generation whatsoever, what you hear is entirely real
Normal driving feels refined and effortless, like a premium luxury car should
The air suspension handles real Indian road conditions with genuine composure
Steering is precise and builds confidence quickly, even in a car of this size
Parking and manoeuvring such a large car feels far more manageable than expected
The honest observation from our limited Kozhikode drive is this: the roads here simply cannot do justice to what this car is capable of. A proper track session or an open highway stretch is what the Emeya truly needs. What we experienced was enough to confirm that the performance is real and the refinement is impressive. The full picture will require more space.
Verdict
The Lotus Emeya does not try to blend in. It was never designed to.
Design is among the most striking of any electric car currently available
Performance at this level on an electric platform is genuinely rare at any price
Interior quality, technology, and luxury are benchmarks for the segment
Real-world Indian road capability is better than the car’s aggressive stance suggests
At approximately three crore rupees, the attention and experience it delivers is hard to argue with
This is not just Lotus going electric. This is Lotus proving that electrification can be beautiful, powerful, and still feel like a driver’s car worth caring about.