2023 Fiat 500e electric car confirmed for Australia

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Fiat Australia has confirmed the 500e will arrive in Australia next year.

Fiat will bring the pint-sized electric 500e to Australia next year, likely ushering in a new affordable EV option next to rivals such as the Mini Electric.

The all-electric 500 city car has been available to order in Europe for two years (as we’ve tested already).

In top-spec trim, the 500 electric hatchback offers plenty. With a larger 42kWh battery it achieves a WLTP-rated 320km on a single charge and thanks to 85kW charging capability, the 500 electric can recharge from 0 to 80 per cent in 35 minutes.

The larger 42kWh battery is likely the option for Australia over Europe’s smaller 24kWh base model, although it helps push the price of the range-topping Icon model to almost $50,0000 in Europe.

Some of the options available overseas include Mineral Grey, Ocean Green and Celestial Blue paint, and standard equipment such as LED headlights, “eco-leather” trim, 17-inch alloy wheels and chrome exterior trim.

The hatchback gets a glass-panoramic roof in place of the convertible’s retracting fabric hood.

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The revisions required to make the 500 EV are sufficient enough for Fiat to call this model the third generation – following the 2007 rebirth and the original Cinquecento made between 1957 and 1975.

There’s a new platform that results in a slight increase in size compared with the Mk2, so the EV is 60mm wider and 60mm longer. The car’s wheelbase has grown by 20mm too, but the overall length of the 500 is still under four metres.

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Fiat hasn’t played around too much with the car’s styling. The side profile of the new EV is still unmistakably 500, but there are tweaks to the front end, with a new bumper that is actually closer in style to the set-up on the original 500. There are split headlights – another nod to the 1957 model – and a new 500 badge on the rear end.

The car has a 42kWh lithium-ion battery pack – enough to deliver up to 320km of range. It powers an 87kW electric motor that can take the Fiat 500e from 0-100km/h in nine seconds and on to a top speed of 150km/h. Those stats apply to both hatchback and convertible variants.

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The 500 gets an 85kW DC charger, so the car can be recharged from flat to 80 per cent of capacity in just 35 minutes. A full charge on a 7.4kW home wallbox will take just over six hours, and Fiat also plans to launch its own 3kW home charger, which will be able to be plugged into a domestic socket without requiring professional installation.

The car will let drivers pick from three driving modes. Normal is described by Fiat as being “as close as possible to driving a vehicle with a normal combustion engine”, while Range activates higher levels of brake energy recuperation. This will allow owners to drive the car using only the throttle pedal and anticipating stop situations.

The last mode, Sherpa, preserves as much range as possible, so it limits the top speed to 80km/h, blunts throttle response and turns off the climate control and heated seats.

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Inside, there’s a bigger jump in design and quality, because Fiat has used the car’s new platform to introduce a cleaner, less cluttered dashboard with improved materials. There should be huge gains in in-car technology too, because the 500 is the first FCA product to get the group’s new UConnect 5 infotainment system. This brings a 10.25-inch high-definition touchscreen with wireless Apple CarPlay functionality and the ability, in future, to offer wireless Android Auto. The instrument panel is now a seven-inch TFT digital display.

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The 500 will offer a range of smartphone apps, allowing users to check the charge level of their car remotely, and warm or cool the vehicle before setting off. On-board Wi-Fi is part of the bundle of new technologies on the reborn 500, as is tracking software to help trace the car if it is stolen.

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Fiat claims that the new 500 EV is capable of ‘Level 2’ semi-autonomous driving, using a front-facing camera system to monitor the road ahead. Adaptive cruise control with automatic braking and accelerating, lane keep assist, speed limit assist, blind spot warning and 360-degree sensors for tricky manoeuvres all feature.

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Further details for the Australian-spec Fiat 500e will be revealed at a later date.

John Mcllroy

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