Nissan Says Its Next EVs Could Double Driving Range by 2028
Coming Soon
Nissan Motor has done it, at least to its standard. The company has announced that it is closer to mass-producing solid-state batteries by 2028, which is on track with other brands like Toyota and Honda to bring solid-state cells to market.
Nikkei Asia has the scoop, stating that Nissan's 23-layer solid-state battery tech is close to planned mass production for 2028. The company achieved its performance goals for commercialization. The story comes from a technical briefing that highlights battery, charging, and AI software technologies that the Japanese brand is looking to commercialize in the coming years.
Solid-State over Lithium-Ion
If you've been following EV and technology news, you might find that there's bound to be a tectonic shift happening soon in the world of batteries. Portable power over the last 20 years has become exceedingly important in everyday life. Smartphones, cars, and even the laptop I'm using right now to write this article all use batteries.
The most widely used battery technology in almost all devices right now is lithium-ion. In terms of energy density, lithium-ion technology is reaching a plateau. Enter solid-state batteries, which can hold double the energy density compared to a comparably-sized lithium-ion cell.
Double the Capacity, Double the Range
Now that each individual solid-state cell can hold more charge than a lithium-ion cell given the same footprint, it's safe to say that future EVs will offer double the driving range. Nowadays, getting 300 miles out of a single charge is great (like in the 2026 Nissan Leaf), but what if that could go to about 600 miles on a single charge on nothing but battery power?
Currently, that figure can only be achieved by range-extended electric vehicles. On top of all that, solid-state batteries can withstand high-output charging, reducing charging time by about two-thirds compared to industry standards.
Even Faster Charging
With battery technology being pushed to the absolute limit by Chinese automakers like BYD, with its Flash Charging, and Geely, with its Energee Golden Brick, clocking in sub-5-minute charge times, we could see this number go lower and lower as long as the right charger is in play.
Nissan has developed a new bidirectional charger that will launch in the market by 2028. On top of charging, the bidirectional design of the charger means it can also plug into a house's power grid, providing emergency power should the lights go out.
The brand is also aiming to sell its new charger at a much lower price than what's available. It's estimated that some chargers can cost about $10,000, but Nissan aims to make its charging technology more affordable to put it in more homes.
Nissan also plans to sell surplus power back to the grid as soon as 2030 with its charging technology.
AI Software that Writes Itself
Finally, software-defined vehicles for Nissan in the near future. The brand plans to adopt an in-house platform this year, aimed at promoting the development of vehicle software. Essentially, it's software that writes itself, using data collected from vehicles.
Nissan will use this software to roll out artificial intelligence-powered autonomous driving features by 2027. We might also start seeing an "AI-Partner" feature in new Nissan models, which covers areas like navigation and other activities by monitoring in-car conversations (creepy, but kind of cool, I guess?).
As for the spread of this software, Nikkei Asia reported that the brand will equip around 90% of its models with AI autonomous driving capabilities, which is a part of the brand's long-term strategy. As stated by Takashi Yoshizawa, a corporate executive at Nissan, "We'll advance the integrated development of AI-Drive, AI-Partner and AI software and promote the intelligent transformation of our vehicles."
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This story was originally published April 22, 2026 at 3:00 AM.