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    Lucid Air Cargo Space With Seats Down: Real-World Room & Packing Tips
    Reviews & Comparisons·9 min read·By Recharged Editorial Team

    Lucid Air Cargo Space With Seats Down: Real-World Room & Packing Tips

    lucid-aircargo-spacetrunk-and-frunkroad-tripused-ev-buyingtesla-model-s-comparisonluxury-ev-sedanev-practicality

    Table of Contents

    • Lucid Air cargo space at a glance
    • How much cargo space does the Lucid Air have, seats up vs down?
    • What actually fits in a Lucid Air with the seats folded?
    • Trunk vs. frunk: how the space is laid out
    • Lucid Air cargo space vs. Tesla Model S and others
    • Everyday practicality: strollers, golf bags, and Costco runs
    • Packing tips to maximize Lucid Air cargo space
    • Is the Lucid Air practical enough for your lifestyle?
    • Lucid Air cargo space FAQ

    If you’re looking at a Lucid Air, you probably already know it’s an efficiency and range monster. But if you’re cross-shopping it with a Tesla Model S or a luxury SUV, the question becomes more basic: how much Lucid Air cargo space do you actually get with the seats down, and is it enough for real life, kids, strollers, golf clubs, or road-trip gear?

    Quick answer

    With the rear seats folded, the Lucid Air offers roughly double its seats-up cargo volume. In practical terms, you can fit bulky items like bikes (with front wheels off), multiple large suitcases, or flat-pack furniture while still benefiting from one of the largest frunks in the segment.

    Lucid Air cargo space at a glance

    Lucid Air cargo headline numbers

    ~32 ft³
    Total seats-up cargo
    Combined trunk + frunk, depending on model year and trim
    ~64 ft³
    Seats-down estimate
    Real-world estimate with rear seats folded flat
    60/40
    Split-folding rear seats
    Allows long items plus a rear passenger
    Mid-size+
    Practical class
    Seats-down space more like a wagon than a typical sedan

    Lucid doesn’t publish an official cubic‑feet number for the rear seats folded, but road testers and owners consistently land around the mid‑60s cubic feet when you include the frunk. That puts the Air closer to a long‑roof wagon than a traditional mid-size sedan in terms of usable space.

    Think in "what fits," not just cubic feet

    Cargo specs rarely tell the whole story. Because the Lucid Air has a deep trunk, a pass-through, and a huge frunk, the way space is shaped often matters more than a single volume number on a spec sheet.

    How much cargo space does the Lucid Air have, seats up vs down?

    Lucid Air cargo space: seats up vs seats down (estimates)

    Approximate Lucid Air cargo volumes based on Lucid specs plus independent testing. Exact numbers vary slightly by model year and trim, but the pattern is consistent.

    ConfigurationRear trunk onlyFrunk onlyCombined cargo (seats up)Combined cargo (seats folded)
    Seats up~22–26 ft³~10 ft³~32 ft³N/A
    Seats down (rear 60/40 folded)~50–54 ft³ (usable)~10 ft³N/A~60–64 ft³ (estimated)

    The Lucid Air’s frunk does a lot of work to close the gap with hatchback rivals.

    With seats up, most Lucid Air trims give you roughly 22–26 cubic feet in the rear trunk plus about 10 cubic feet in the frunk. Fold the 60/40 rear seats and you open up a long, continuous load floor that roughly doubles your usable cargo volume to the mid‑60s cubic‑feet range, especially if you’re willing to load to the ceiling and use the frunk.

    Don’t over-trust brochure math

    Lucid publishes liters and separate trunk/frunk numbers in some documents, and different outlets quote slightly different cubic‑feet figures. Treat these numbers as directional. Your actual usable space will depend on how high you’re willing to stack and what you’re hauling.

    What actually fits in a Lucid Air with the seats folded?

    Real-world packing examples with seats down

    Here’s what owners and testers are actually loading into their Airs.

    Airport & family trips

    • 3–4 full‑size checked suitcases plus 2–3 carry‑ons
    • Or 2 large suitcases + stroller + soft duffel bags
    • Extra small items up front in the frunk

    Outdoor & sports gear

    • 1–2 adult bikes with front wheels removed, loaded diagonally
    • Golf clubs: 2–3 bags seats up, more with seats folded
    • Camping bins, coolers, folding chairs stacked in trunk + frunk

    Flat-pack & bulky items

    • Long flat‑pack furniture boxes (think IKEA bookcases)
    • A disassembled crib or playpen plus luggage
    • Medium TVs (up to ~55" in box) slid in diagonally

    The big limitation isn’t floor length; it’s the trunk opening height. The Lucid Air uses a traditional sedan trunk rather than a hatchback, so very tall or boxy items that would slide straight into a Model Y or wagon may need to go in at an angle, or simply won’t clear the opening even though there’s room once inside.

    Watch the trunk opening for mobility devices

    If you’re loading a wheelchair or mobility scooter, measure the folded height carefully. Owners report the main trunk opening height is just over about 16 inches, with 13–15 inches of interior vertical clearance in most of the floor. Many wheelchairs fit, but not all, the limiting factor is the opening, not the overall volume.

    Trunk vs. frunk: how the space is laid out

    Rear trunk (primary cargo area)

    • Deep floor with a drop‑down well near the bumper for extra vertical space.
    • 60/40 split-folding rear seatbacks with a long pass‑through for skis or lumber.
    • Best for suitcases, strollers, golf bags, and bulk groceries.
    • Seats down, you get a long, mostly flat floor from the trunk lip to the back of the front seats.

    Front trunk (frunk)

    • Large by EV standards: roughly 10 cubic feet in many trims.
    • Squared‑off shape makes it ideal for carry‑on bags, soft duffels, or backpacks.
    • Great for keeping dirty or smelly gear (hiking boots, sports equipment) away from the cabin.
    • On road trips, use the frunk for rarely accessed items (spare clothes, tools) and reserve the trunk for daily‑use gear.
    Lucid Air rear trunk with split-folding rear seats laid flat and luggage loaded for a road trip
    With the rear seats folded, the Lucid Air’s deep trunk and pass-through create a long, continuous load floor that punches well above typical sedan practicality.

    Seat folding details

    The Lucid Air’s rear seatbacks fold forward from the trunk or the rear doors. It’s a 60/40 split, so you can keep one rear seat usable while still loading long items through the pass‑through.

    Lucid Air cargo space vs. Tesla Model S and others

    The benchmark in this segment is still the Tesla Model S, largely because of its hatchback. With the rear seats down, Tesla quotes about 60 cubic feet of cargo volume just in the rear. Add the front trunk and it edges higher still. On paper, that gives the Model S more pure "seats‑down" cargo volume than the Lucid Air’s sedan layout.

    Lucid Air vs. Tesla and EQS: cargo space comparison

    How the Lucid Air’s cargo space stacks up against key electric luxury rivals, seats up and seats down.

    ModelBody styleRear cargo seats upRear cargo seats downFrunkTotal seats-up cargo
    Lucid AirSedan (trunk)~22–26 ft³~50–54 ft³ (est.)~10 ft³~32 ft³
    Tesla Model SHatchback~26 ft³~60 ft³~2–5 ft³~28–31 ft³
    Mercedes EQSHatchback~22 ft³~63 ft³N/A~22 ft³

    Tesla’s hatch wins on maximum rear volume, but Lucid’s huge frunk helps narrow the gap for real-world use.

    Where the Lucid Air fights back is combined practicality. Its frunk is dramatically larger than the Model S’s, and the cabin packaging is more efficient. For many owners, that means the difference between the Air and a hatchback shows up only with very tall or bulky items. For day‑to‑day family duty and most road trips, the Air’s seats‑down cargo feels less like a compromise and more like a different shape of the same total capability.

    Bottom line vs. Model S

    If you haul big, boxy things all the time, bikes, furniture, home‑improvement supplies, the Model S hatchback still wins. If you mostly move luggage, strollers, and gear in bags or bins, the Lucid Air’s trunk + big frunk combination is surprisingly competitive in the real world.

    Everyday practicality: strollers, golf bags, and Costco runs

    How the Lucid Air handles common cargo scenarios

    What it’s like to live with the Air as your only car.

    Kids & strollers

    • Most full‑size strollers fit lengthwise in the main trunk.
    • Compact or travel strollers can stand upright in the lower well.
    • With one seat folded, you can run stroller + luggage for airport duty.

    Golf & sports

    • 2–3 golf bags fit with seats up, especially if you use the deeper well.
    • Bigger tournament loads? Fold one side of the rear seat.
    • Keep shoes and muddy gear in the frunk to protect the cabin.

    Grocery & Costco

    • Deep trunk swallows a big warehouse run, especially with reusable totes.
    • Use the frunk for fragile or climate‑sensitive items you don’t want under heavy boxes.
    • Seats down turns the Air into a credible light‑duty hauler.

    Cold-weather note

    In winter, consider keeping snowy gear, boots, shovels, traction boards, in the frunk. That keeps meltwater out of the carpeted trunk while still being easy to access at a charging stop.

    Packing tips to maximize Lucid Air cargo space

    7 ways to get the most out of Lucid Air cargo space

    1. Use the frunk as a second trunk

    Think of the frunk as <strong>Level 2 storage</strong>: tools, emergency kit, extra clothes, and items you won’t touch until you reach the destination. That frees up the rear trunk for day‑to‑day access.

    2. Load heavy items low and forward

    Put heavier suitcases in the main trunk floor close to the rear seatbacks, not on the drop‑down lip or stacked on top. That keeps weight centered and reduces the chance of things shifting under hard braking.

    3. Exploit the 60/40 split for long items

    If you’re carrying skis, boards, or long boxes, fold only the smaller rear seat section and slide items through the pass‑through. You keep room for a rear passenger plus most of the trunk width.

    4. Use soft bags instead of hard suitcases

    <strong>Duffel bags and soft‑side luggage</strong> conform better to the trunk’s curves, especially around the wheel arches and under the rear shelf. You’ll fit more gear than with all hard suitcases.

    5. Protect the seatbacks

    When you fold the rear seatbacks, add a blanket or cargo liner if you’re loading anything sharp, dirty, or heavy. The Lucid’s interior materials are upscale; they don’t love repeated encounters with tool boxes and dog crates.

    6. Mind the trunk opening height

    If a large box just barely fits through your home doorway, it may not clear the Lucid’s trunk opening. Measure the box height vs. the trunk opening, or be prepared to use another vehicle for that one big haul.

    7. Plan charging stops around packing

    On long trips, put <strong>snacks, jackets, charging cables, and entertainment</strong> near the trunk opening or in the cabin. Reserve the hard‑to‑reach parts of the trunk and frunk for items you’ll only need at the destination.

    Secure loose items

    Like any EV, the Lucid Air accelerates and regeneratively brakes hard. Loose boxes or tool cases in a fully loaded trunk can become projectiles. Use cargo straps or nets when the trunk and seats‑down area are packed to the ceiling.

    Is the Lucid Air practical enough for your lifestyle?

    When the Lucid Air works brilliantly

    • You want sedan comfort and range but need real cargo flexibility.
    • Your typical loads are luggage, strollers, sports gear, and Costco runs, not appliances or building supplies.
    • You like the idea of a giant frunk for cleaner separation of gear (dirty vs. clean, valuables vs. bulk).
    • You care more about rear-seat comfort and efficiency than a hatchback profile.

    When you may want an SUV or hatch

    • You regularly haul very tall, boxy items (dog crates, tall dressers, big TVs in box).
    • You’re constantly loading and unloading bikes or bulky outdoor gear.
    • You need a cargo area that’s easy to access for someone with limited mobility (higher hatch openings, lower liftovers).
    • You want third‑row seats or the ability to haul both a big family and all their stuff at once.

    From an analyst’s perspective, the Lucid Air hits a sweet spot: efficiency and performance of a flagship EV sedan with cargo flexibility that’s closer to a wagon than its traditional three‑box silhouette suggests. The seats‑down cargo space won’t fully replace a Model Y or an SUV if you’re constantly hauling bikes and furniture, but for most households, it’s genuinely practical as an only car.

    Looking at a used Lucid Air?

    If you’re shopping used, Recharged can help you sanity‑check whether an Air’s cargo space fits your life. Every EV we list comes with a Recharged Score Report so you can see battery health, fair market pricing, and expert guidance before you commit, plus financing, trade‑in options, and nationwide delivery if you decide an Air is the right fit.

    Ready to find your next EV?

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    Lucid Air cargo space FAQ

    Frequently asked questions about Lucid Air cargo space

    If you’re trying to decide whether the Lucid Air’s cargo space with the seats down is enough, the answer comes down to what you haul most often. For luggage, kids’ gear, sports equipment, and the occasional flat‑pack furniture run, it’s more than up to the task, helped along by one of the best frunks in the business. If you decide an Air belongs in your driveway, a used example with verified battery health and expert backing from Recharged can give you flagship‑EV practicality without the new‑car price tag.

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