The Mercedes-Benz E-Class Is the 2025 MotorTrend Car of the Year
Always there. Always getting better.Our 2025 Car of the Year is far from the sexiest choice. It isn’t a sleek, high-powered electric German sport sedan, nor is it the long-anticipated rebirth of a ’60s cult classic. Instead, it’s a car that has been molded and refined since the 1950s with a clear purpose to make it just plain better. Smoother. Quicker. More efficient. More comfortable. Better at anticipating driver needs. And more luxurious—not in a trashy, in-your-face way, but quietly. Confidently.
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It's a dependable constant, always what you need when you need it, nothing more, nothing less. For those reasons and more, this year’s Golden Calipers go to what might just be the best midsize luxury car of the 21st century: the 10th-generation Mercedes-Benz E-Class.
Advancement in Design
The E-Class has long lived in the shadow of the larger S-Class and has increasingly been squeezed from below by the C-Class. For the past several generations it’s often felt torn between the two camps—mixing exterior styling cues from its big sibling with the interior build and features of the cheaper C-Class.
The new-for-2024 E-Class, available as a sedan and station wagon in pseudo crossover E450 All-Terrain form, finally feels like its own thing. Its styling is unmistakably Mercedes, but it’s no longer the same sausage cut in different lengths. “The sedan’s side view is simple yet elegant without being flashy,” guest judge and automotive engineering legend Chris Theodore said. “Subtle longitudinal strakes near the top of the front and rear fenders kindle a reminder of the classic Gullwing while visually lengthening the sedan’s appearance.” The wagon, despite riding on the same wheelbase and with the same overall length as the sedan, is visually lengthened thanks to a tapered daylight opening, lending the All-Terrain a shooting brake profile.
The new nose and tail treatment don’t advance much in the broader sense of automotive design, but in the strict confines of the Mercedes lineup, they’re an evolutionary step forward and a preview of things to come from Stuttgart. Its scalloped glass headlights are a subtle homage to the marque’s late 20th century designs and indirectly pay a tribute to the rival Chris Bangle–era BMWs from the early 21st century—cars that arguably reset the styling standard for what a large executive sedan should be in the modern era.
Efforts were also made to visually link the new gas-only E-Class with recent all-electric models such as the Mercedes EQE sedan. Up front, this approach, featuring a black surround to the three-pointed-star-filled grille, was less successful, drawing comparisons to a racoon’s snout. The rear-end treatment, however, was executed better. An LED lightbar links two scalloped, tri-star-filled taillights, visually connecting the tail with the nose of Mercedes’ most successful car with its less successful EVs.
Evolutionary steps were made to the interior, as well. The large, 3D-capable digital instrument cluster, central infotainment display, and optional, passenger-facing “Superscreen” distract at first from what’s a remarkably cohesive interior design. We were particularly fond of the attention paid to the air vents, which coolly blend their function with aesthetic purpose by visually linking the left and right sides of the cabin to the neat floating door pulls, which not only look great but also allow for increased storage in the door pockets. At night, new LED colors combine with the passenger screen’s various screen savers to create a surprisingly beautiful aesthetic. It’s a lovely place to spend some time, especially when considering how nearly silent the cabin is while traveling at highway speeds.
Practically speaking, the new E-Class is more thoughtfully designed around people and their things than before. The center console, for instance, features a hidden wireless phone slot and foldaway front cupholders, allowing more space for various odds and ends. The back seat is roomier than before thanks in part to scallops in the front seat backs. The trunks of both the sedan and the wagon are also more usable than before, with the sedan now offering up compact SUV levels of cargo volume and the wagon matching some midsize SUVs.







