Charging Comparison
Alpine A390 vs Opel Grandland Electric
Compared variants: GT vs 73 kWh
Updated April 2026
Data shown is approximate and based on publicly available specifications and real-world estimates. For models with multiple battery versions, this page compares the variants listed above. Actual performance varies with driving conditions, temperature, state of charge, and charger hardware. Always check the manufacturer specification page and your vehicle's manual for official figures. EVcourse is not affiliated with any vehicle manufacturer.
Quick verdict
The Alpine A390 has the higher published DC charging figure at 200 kW, while the Alpine A390 is more efficient at approximately 189 Wh/km. The Alpine A390 offers more WLTP rated range at 550 km.
Side-by-Side Specs
| Spec | Alpine A390 | Opel Grandland Electric |
|---|---|---|
| Compared variant | GT | 73 kWh |
| Battery (approx.) | ~89 kWh | ~73 kWh |
| WLTP range (rated) | ~550 km | ~523 km |
| Efficiency (approx.) | ~189 Wh/km | ~197 Wh/km |
| DC fast charging (published) | up to 200 kW | up to 160 kW |
| 10-80% charge time (approx.) | ~27 min | ~29 min |
| Max AC charging | up to 22 kW | up to 11 kW |
| DC connector | CCS2 | CCS2 |
Charging Speed
The Alpine A390 has the higher published DC charging figure at 200 kW, which is roughly 25% higher than the Opel Grandland Electric at 160 kW. In practice, that figure only tells part of the story. The charging curve, battery temperature, and state of charge all affect how quickly your car actually charges.
For the published fast-charge window, the Alpine A390 is listed at about 27 minutes, which is 2 minutes quicker than the Opel Grandland Electric at 29 minutes. On a road trip, that difference adds up over multiple stops.
Range and Efficiency
The Alpine A390 has a WLTP rated range of approximately 550 km, which is roughly 27 km more than the Opel Grandland Electric at approximately 523 km. WLTP is a standardized lab test. Expect your actual range to be lower, varying with speed, weather, terrain, and driving style.
Efficiency matters more than battery size for daily driving costs. The Alpine A390 consumes 189 Wh/km, compared to 197 Wh/km for the Opel Grandland Electric. That means the Alpine A390 uses less energy per kilometer, which translates to lower charging costs and fewer charging stops on longer drives.
A more efficient car does not always mean more range. Battery size plays a role too. The Alpine A390 has approximately 89 kWh of useable battery , while the Opel Grandland Electric has approximately 73 kWh.
Which One Should You Choose?
If fast charging is your priority, the Alpine A390 has the higher published DC figure (up to 200 kW) and the shorter published charge time at approximately 27 minutes. For long road trips, published stop time matters more than the headline kW number alone.
For AC charging (home wallboxes, workplace chargers, and public street chargers), the Alpine A390 supports up to 22 kW, compared to up to 11 kW for the Opel Grandland Electric. In Europe, many public chargers are 22 kW AC, so this difference can matter at those locations if the higher AC figure is fitted on the car you buy.
If you mostly charge at home or at work and care more about daily driving costs, the Alpine A390 is the more efficient choice at 189 Wh/km. Lower consumption means lower electricity bills over time.
For maximum range between charges, the Alpine A390 has a WLTP rated range of approximately 550 km, which is roughly 27 km more. Both are capable EVs. The best choice depends on how you charge and how far you drive.
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From Finn, engineer: Charging specs alone do not tell the full story. Real-world charging speed depends on battery temperature, state of charge, and the charger itself. These comparisons use manufacturer-published data. Approximate values only.
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