Volvo Car UK has done something slightly unexpected with its smallest EV.
It has turned the EX30 into a compact commercial vehicle called the EX30 Cargo, marking the brand’s first move into the van market in that country.
It is still based on the electric EX30 SUV, but the rear seats have been removed and replaced with a flat load floor, a bulkhead and reworked side panels to create a proper working load bay.
Volvo said the result is up to 1,000 litres of load volume and a payload of 390kg.
This is not a factory-built van in the usual sense. Volvo Car UK said the EX30 Cargo is created through a second-stage conversion, and buyers can order it either as a standard EX30 Cargo or as an EX30 Cross Country Cargo with extra ground clearance.
The conversion can also be applied to newly ordered vehicles or existing stock, covering MY2026 and MY2027 cars. That gives fleet buyers a bit more flexibility than a fixed one-model commercial line-up would.
The practical touches go further than just deleting the back seats. Volvo said the rear doors open wider for easier loading, there is an extra cargo work light, and the underfloor subframe adds more securing and mounting points.
In short, this is not just an EX30 with the rear cabin blocked off. It has at least been thought through with trades, couriers and fleet users in mind.
Powertrain choice is unusually broad for something this small and work-focused.
The EX30 Cargo is offered with P3 150hp, P5 272hp and even P8 428hp all-wheel drive options, depending on model year and version.
Volvo said the new MY27 P3 Extended Range variant is aimed at customers who want lower output but still need up to 483km of electric range.
Pricing starts at £36,010 (RM192,000) on the road for the P5 standard-range version, and sales are handled exclusively through Volvo Car UK’s fleet channels.
The more interesting bit is what this said about where EV makers think the next opportunities may be.
Small electric vans are still a niche, but a premium compact one with Google-based tech, Volvo safety kit and a recognisable badge could find a few willing business buyers who want something tidier than the usual white-box delivery van.




















