From the MG 4 to the Renault 5, the small electric car is all of a sudden in vogue. Battery technology has at last started to become more cost-effective and it seems that some manufacturers have finally cracked the code to bring electric power to the masses in a more compact package, rather than in the form of a great big SUV.
It’s these two areas – cost and compactness – in which our fleet’s new arrival will appeal most, its wallet-friendly price being the headline-grabber here.
Starting from £22,095, the Citroën ë-C3 is the latest affordable new small EV to emerge from the Stellantis stable. It’s positioned comfortably among the UK’s top 10 cheapest electric cars, ahead of key rivals such as the small car du jour 5 (£22,995), the quirky new Hyundai Inster (£23,505) and the recently updated Vauxhall Corsa Electric (£26,170).
The ë-C3 is based on Stellantis’s value-focused Smart Car platform, which can house both electric and combustion powertrains and is shared with the C3 Aircross, Fiat Grande Panda and Vauxhall Frontera. My test car has a single, front-mounted electric motor producing 111bhp and 92lb ft.
Energy is supplied by a 44.2kWh lithium-iron-phosphate drive battery with an almost entirely usable capacity of 43.7kWh. That’s good for a claimed 198 miles, which compares favourably with the 5’s smaller-battery Urban Range model (its 40kWh pack returns 190 miles). My car’s charging speed is rated at 100kW, beating both the Inster (73kW) and 5 (80kW).

The ë-C3’s on-paper performance is also competitive, if not exactly compelling. It will canter from 0-62mph in 10.4sec, according to the promotional literature, or a full second slower if you ask our road testers.







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But hey, according to the tacky bit of fabric sticking out of the driver's door arm rest, you will still "Have Fun!" as you amble along, likely holding up traffic whilst you chase/crawl in hope of a bit more range until something breaks, because Stellantis.
I'll stick to my old 1.6 VAG diesel Leon with slightly better performance figures and no doubt vastly better handling, comfort and lack of driving interventions beyond its ABS, cruise and the traction control I sometimes set off when accelerating out of bends on the sort of roads the e-Crap would likely fall off.
Emmm 1.6 diesel Leon owner slatting another cars performance. I didn't know bots could drive!
I am not sure I could even consider anything from Stellantis, their reputation for poor build and unreliable cars proceeds them.
Chinese? Absolute no.
Hyundai or Kia are strong candidates.
Renault 4 is top of my list today.
Personally if I was given a choice between the e-C3 and the Renualt 5 I'd say that £900 would be money well spent as the 5 is a far more distinctive car unlike the e-C3 which is rather bland by comparison. The Stellantis product that would likely trouble Renualt is the Grande Panda which compared to the e-C3 is a much more cutting edge product that can go toe to toe with the 5