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Blog > 2026 Cadillac OPTIQ vs. Audi Q4 e-tron vs. Tesla Model Y: Which Electric SUV Belongs in Your Driveway?

2026 Cadillac OPTIQ vs. Audi Q4 e-tron vs. Tesla Model Y: Which Electric SUV Belongs in Your Driveway?

Silver SUV parked under a vibrant sunset, emphasizing modern design and elegance.

The compact electric SUV segment has never been more competitive. The 2026 Audi Q4 e-tron brings German precision. The 2026 Tesla Model Y brings software dominance and charging infrastructure. And the 2026 Cadillac OPTIQ? It brings everything both of those vehicles offer — and then adds things neither of them can match.

If you’re shopping for an electric SUV in the Whitby area and you’ve narrowed it down to these three, here’s what you need to know before you decide.

Range: How Far Can You Actually Go?

Range is the first question most EV buyers ask, and it’s a fair one for Ontario drivers who regularly travel between Whitby, Toronto, and beyond.

The 2026 Cadillac OPTIQ (RWD) delivers a Cadillac-estimated 510 km of range on a full charge, per Cadillac Canada. In AWD configuration, that figure comes to an estimated 450 km — still class-competitive with all-season traction included. The 2026 Audi Q4 e-tron delivers an NRCan-estimated 463 km of range on the rear-wheel-drive variant. The 2026 Tesla Model Y Long Range AWD is rated at approximately 533 km per Tesla Canada.

The Model Y’s Long Range AWD leads on paper, but the OPTIQ’s RWD range closes that gap considerably — and, importantly, the OPTIQ pairs that range with a level of interior and technology refinement that the Model Y simply doesn’t match at any trim level.

Technology: Where Cadillac Pulls Ahead

This is where the OPTIQ establishes a lead that neither competitor can close. Every 2026 OPTIQ comes standard with Super Cruise — Cadillac’s hands-free driver assistance system, recognized as MotorTrend’s Best Tech 2025 for driver assistance — included with a three-year trial, per Cadillac Canada. Super Cruise allows hands-free driving on over 400,000 km of compatible roads across North America, including the 401 corridor that Whitby and Durham Region drivers use daily.

The Q4 e-tron offers Audi’s driver assistance suite, but no comparable hands-free highway driving technology is available at this class. Tesla’s Autopilot is standard on the Model Y, with Full Self-Driving available as a paid add-on — but it operates under active driver supervision requirements and is not a true hands-free system in the same regulatory sense as Super Cruise.

The OPTIQ also comes standard with a 33″ diagonal advanced LED display capable of 9K resolution and over one billion colours, Google Built-in compatibility, and a 19-speaker AKG Studio Surround system with Dolby Atmos capability. The Q4 e-tron’s infotainment system is competent, and the Model Y’s minimalist 15.4″ touchscreen is familiar — but neither approaches the OPTIQ’s cabin experience.

Interior and Cargo: The OPTIQ’s Strongest Argument

The 2026 OPTIQ offers segment-best rear cargo volume at 736 L (26 cu. ft.) and segment-best second-row legroom, per Cadillac Canada. For Whitby families loading up for weekend trips to Algonquin or Collingwood, that space is tangible — not a marketing claim.

The Q4 e-tron offers approximately 520 L of cargo space. The Model Y provides around 854 L with the rear seats up — a genuine advantage — but its interior fit and finish, and the overall material quality of the cabin, remain below what the OPTIQ delivers across every trim.

Even though the Model Y offers more raw cargo volume, the OPTIQ’s build quality, available PaperWood veneer from recycled materials, 126-colour dual-zone ambient lighting, and Inteluxe seating surfaces create an environment that feels genuinely premium — not utilitarian.

Charging: An Expanding Network

All three vehicles support DC fast charging, but the OPTIQ’s standard NACS charge port gives it native access to Tesla’s Supercharger network — over 21,500 stations across North America, including more than 250,000 public chargers accessible through the myCadillac app, per Cadillac Canada. The OPTIQ can accept up to 122 km of estimated range in as little as 10 minutes at a 150 kW DC fast-charge station.

The Q4 e-tron supports up to 175 kW DC fast charging via CCS, per Audi Canada data. The Model Y supports up to 250 kW at Tesla Superchargers — the fastest charging rate of the three. However, the OPTIQ’s NACS port eliminates the adapter friction that Q4 e-tron owners still face when accessing Supercharger stations, giving Cadillac a practical day-to-day charging advantage over Audi.

Side-by-Side Comparison

2026 Cadillac OPTIQ2026 Audi Q4 e-tron2026 Tesla Model Y
2026 Cadillac OPTIQ2026 Audi Q4 e-tron2026 Tesla Model Y
Range (best config)510 km (RWD)463 km (RWD)533 km (LR AWD)
AWD Available 440 hp 335 hp 397 hp
Hands-Free Highway Drive Super Cruise (standard)NoNo (supervised only)
Infotainment33″ LED display11.6″ MMI15.4″ touchscreen
Audio System19-speaker AKG / Dolby Atmos10-speaker (base)Premium audio (avail.)
Rear Cargo Volume736 L (segment-best)~520 L~854 L
Native Supercharger Access NACS standardNo (adapter required)Yes
OTA Software UpdatesYesYesYes
Max DC Fast Charge Rate150 kW175 kW250 kW

The Right Choice for Durham Region Drivers

The Audi Q4 e-tron is a well-built, refined EV — but its range and technology package trail the OPTIQ at comparable configurations. The Tesla Model Y remains a compelling and practical choice, particularly for buyers already in the Tesla ecosystem, and its charging speed and cargo room are genuine strengths.

But for drivers in Whitby who want the full package — segment-leading range in RWD, hands-free highway driving as a standard feature, a genuinely premium interior, native Supercharger access, and a brand that backs it all with a dealership experience — the 2026 Cadillac OPTIQ is the most complete electric SUV in this comparison.

Visit Nurse Cadillac in Whitby to explore the full OPTIQ lineup and experience Super Cruise on your test drive.