The radically different new Nissan Micra will go on sale in September, priced the same as its Renault 5 twin.
The sixth-generation supermini, now electric only, starts at £22,995 in entry-level Engage trim, which is exclusively paired with the smallest 40kWh battery.
For that, buyers get 18in alloy wheels, a 10in infotainment touchscreen and an efficiency-boosting heat pump.
This price rises to £24,995 for the same pack in mid-level Advanced trim, which adds Google software to the screen, parking sensors and wireless phone charging.
Optioning the bigger 52kWh battery (which offers up to 260 miles of range) increases the price to £26,995.
The range tops out £29,865 in Evolve trim, which is only sold with the 52kWh battery. This brings heated front seats, a heated steering wheel, two-tone paint and Nissan's e-Pedal system.
These prices do not include any discount from the UK government's new Electric Car Grant (ECG); Nissan said it expects the Micra to qualify for the £1500 discount banding.
Order books will open on 1 September.
New Micra: What's different?
The sixth-generation Micra has been positioned to appeal to younger, European buyers, in a bid to move the supermini away from being known as a “grandma car”.
The newest generation of the popular hatchback – which has amassed more than six million sales since first being launched 42 years ago – has been fully revealed by the Japanese firm as a twin to Alliance partner Renault’s electric 5. This means it won’t be sold with a combustion engine for the first time in its history.
The Micra is aimed squarely at buyers in Europe, a market in which Nissan is looking to grow after suffering heavy losses in recent years, necessitating a major cost-cutting plan.
It arrives as one of four new Nissan EVs due before the end of 2026, the others being the new Leaf crossover, an electric Juke and an A-segment model that will be twinned with the upcoming Renault Twingo.
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I haven't even seen the fantastic Renault 5 on the road so I doubt it's significantly uglier sister will be seen often. Why did Renault even allow this?
It's like when someone copies someone else's homework, but throws in a couple of mistakes, to try and hide it...
Is it just me, or are these platform shared EVs far more similar than the ICE cars like all of those in the VW stable?