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GotTalentAU | Demian Aditya Audition part 2

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April 28, 2025
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GotTalentAU | Demian Aditya Audition part 2

The best small electric cars – driven, rated and ranked

Electric cars may already be cheaper than you think – and they’re set to get even cheaper. Here’s the best of the crop

  • Best small electric cars

News

Jack Warrick
Sam Phillips

by Jack Warrick and Sam Phillips

10 mins read

26 March 2025

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Accessibility has never been associated with small electric cars, especially when they first filtered into the mainstream market more than a decade ago. 

This was particularly true of smaller electric cars, which were pricey, short on range and too heavy to offer anything for the keen driver. For the everyman, finding an electric supermini or hatchback that offered the same value for money as an ICE one was a challenge. 

Fast-forward to 2025 and the small electric car market is far more promising, with a plethora of affordable and efficient EVs that are packed with usable technology and offer a decent range – and, crucially, ensure you’re getting plenty of bang for your buck. 

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Battery technology has come a long way, too, with more energy-dense packs enabling car makers to strap smaller units to the underside of an EV without compromising on range and efficiency.

Where early electric superminis could barely manage 150 miles in the real world, there are plenty on sale today that will cover much longer distances – up to 250 miles in some cases. 

The breadth of choice is also varied at the lower end of the EV market, with brands like Vauxhall, Peugeot and Citroën competing with upcoming rivals from China, the latter of which typically offered with a lower list price than their European counterparts. 

And while most diminutive EVs are built to maximise range and comfort, there are a few that are tipped towards the keen drivers among us.

Our top pick is the Mini Cooper E, which offers a decent range, fun driving experience and a decent interior. 

But which other small electric cars should you buy? We’ve tested each and every one and here is our rundown of the very best. 

1. Renault 5

9

https://www.autocar.co.uk/
  • Design10
  • Interior9
  • Performance8
  • Ride & Handling9
  • Costs8

Pros

Excellent ride-handling balance

Excellent value for money

Fantastic interior design

Cons

Disappointing cruising efficiency and range

The best small electric car money can buy today is the class-leading Renault 5. 

Not only does it look great with its retro styling, but it’s also excellent to drive in several key areas that its rivals can’t match. 

The 5’s blend of style, value, driving dynamics and fuss-free tech makes it an obvious class leader.

Illya Verpraet, Road Tester

Power stands at 148bhp, but while that’s enough power, straight-line speed isn’t where the Renault 5 particularly excels. Its talents range from its fluid, dynamic handling to its supple ride quality, which beats out the Mini for comfort while remaining fun to drive. 

Its interior is also top-notch, with cues from the first-generation Renault 5, strong material quality and eye-catching upholstery and a generally intuitive layout. 

If there was anything to complain about with the Renault 5, it’s its efficiency. It’s not awful, but its touring range isn’t as good as we’d like it to be on motorway journeys.

Read our Renault 5 review

Save money on a new Renault what What Car?

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2. Mini Cooper E

8

https://www.autocar.co.uk/Mini%20Cooper%20E%20Electric%20front%20tracking
  • Design8
  • Interior8
  • Performance9
  • Ride & Handling8
  • Costs9

Pros

Fun to drive

Improved range

Good performance

Cons

Divisive styling

Distracting infotainment

Increased weight can be felt

The Mini Cooper E is the battery-powered small EV we always wanted from the BMW group brand, being more refined and offering a better range than its predecessor. 

While the first-generation Mini Electric was fun, it was let down by its packaging – and it’s small battery limited its range. 

This second-generation electric Mini is certainly a more grown-up electric car than the original, embarrassing its predecessor.

Illya Verpraet, Road Tester

The Mini Cooper E (renamed for the second-generation) is sleerk, more powerful, has a broad choice of batteries and range and is packed full of usable digital technology from parent company BMW. 

The Coope E is powered by a 181bhp electric motor and uses a 40.7kWh battery that offers up to 190 miles of range, while the more powerful Cooper SE gets a 215bhp motor and a 54.2kWh battery for up to 250 miles of range. 

The Mini is a more grown-up proposition than the previous model, offering a far more usable range, faster charging and more premium lustre. In addition, the price is also very similar to its predecessor. 

That said, it’s heavier than before, which is felt in the corners, and the car has lost some of the driver reward widely expected from a Mini.

The interior is chock full of premium materials and it’s a lovely place to sit, but the fiddly, unintuitive infotainment may put some drivers off. 

Despite those minor qualms, Mini’s updated electric hatch is up there with the very best in the segment and is better than ever.

Read our Mini Cooper E review

Save money with new Mini Electric deals from What Car?

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3. MG 4 EV

8

https://www.autocar.co.uk/MG%204%20EV%20front%20cornering
  • Design8
  • Interior7
  • Performance8
  • Ride & Handling8
  • Costs8

Pros

Provides excellent value

Offers good interior space

Genuinely good fun to drive

Cons

Driver assistance features need a lot of refining

Interior materials don’t feel like they will stand the test of time

Some interior usability niggles

Other picks here not affordable enough? Try this. The MG 4 EV is an important moment in the development of MG Motor as a serious car maker.

Since the British brand’s relaunch under the ownership of the Chinese giant SAIC, it has always played the budget end of the market. With the MG 4, it still does, but with a car that is genuinely impressive in its own right.

The MG 4 EV may not move any technological boundaries, but other manufacturers should undoubtedly see this car as a serious threat.

Illya Verpraet, Road Tester

Its rear-drive layout lets it serve up some real handling thrills while its soft but controlled ride means it’s well suited to rough British roads.

It has a very competitive range and charging figures too, and all for around £27,000 – or £30,000 for the Long Range SE. There’s an Extended Range and a bonkers-fast 429bhp XPower model, but we wouldn’t bother.

You can see some of the cost savings in the low-grade interior materials and slightly haphazard infotainment and driver assistance features, but none of it is egregious enough to seriously detract from how much value for money the MG 4 offers.

Read our MG 4 EV review

Save money with new MG 4 deals from What Car?

Finance this car with Drivenfi

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4. Citroën ë-C3

8

https://www.autocar.co.uk/Citroen%20e%20C3%20front%20tracking
  • Design7
  • Interior8
  • Performance7
  • Ride & Handling8
  • Costs9

Pros

Decent daily performance

Affordable price

Very comfortable

Cons

Other comparable EVs are quicker

Small battery won’t suit all drivers

Lifeless steering

Could the arrival of the new Citroën ë-C3 represent a watershed moment in the evolution of the electric car?

It’s certainly got a lot going for it. Priced from under £22,000, the ë-C3 is primed to become one of the cheapest electric cars on sale in the UK. 

Citroën is to be commended for making a car that offers something truly distinctive in the supermini class and at a price we can all get behind.

Mark Tisshaw, Editor

Power comes from a 44kWh battery, which offers a claimed range of 199 miles. It powers a front-mounted 111bhp electric motor that allows the ë-C3 to hit 0-62mph in around 11.0sec and a top speed of 84mph. 

Although all ë-C3s have a 44kW battery at the moment, a smaller-battery variant may be UK-bound next year and priced nearer to the equally inexpensive Dacia Spring. 

We’ve only driven the ë-C3 on overseas Tarmac so far, but it’s comfortable and packed full of usable standard kit.

Downsides? There’s no denying a range of 199 miles might not be quite enough for some drivers, and while comfortable, it’s not the most dynamic car to drive, with numb steering that wants for driver involvement.

Read our Citroën ë-C3 review

Save money with new electric Citroen deals from What Car?

Finance this car with Drivenfi

5. Vauxhall Corsa Electric

8

https://www.autocar.co.uk/Vauxhall%20Corsa%20Electric%20front%20tracking
  • Design8
  • Interior6
  • Performance7
  • Ride & Handling7
  • Costs8

Pros

Welcome range improvements

100kW charging speed

One of the UK’s cheapest EVs

Cons

Interior isn’t as smart as the Peugeot e-208

Not that exciting to drive

Poor second-row passenger space

Vauxhall’s electric Corsa is one of the most appealing small EVs on sale thanks to its low price, decent range and fast charging speeds.

Early versions were a little behind the technically-related Peugeot e-208 on range, but an update that added a taller final drive ratio and a standard heat pump lifted the range from 209 to 222 miles – and now a battery capacity hike and a new electric motor have lifted it again, this time to 246 miles. 

The Corsa Electric is also very easy to operate and drive, with little extra quirkiness or complication than any EV really needs.

Matt Saunders, Road test editor

The Corsa Electric’s facelift also brought with it a thoroughly revised front end and a new multimedia system. 

The Corsa might be a little plainer than the Peugeot, but to our eyes, it still looks handsome enough, especially in its latest form.

The driving experience combines a genuine 220-mile everyday battery range with keen and competent handling and a comfortable ride, while 100kW DC rapid charging compatibility as standard should be a selling point too.

Vauxhall also has purchase incentives such as free home charger installation and access to a special home energy tariff.

Vauxhall’s large UK dealer network and the brand’s desire to offer some decent discounts have helped to make this one of the UK’s best-selling EVs, converting people who hadn’t previously considered electric motoring. .

Read our Vauxhall Corsa Electric review

Save money with new Vauxhall Corsa Electric deals from What Car?

Finance this car with Drivenfi

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6. Dacia Spring

8

https://www.autocar.co.uk/Dacia%20Spring%20front%20cornering
  • Design7
  • Interior7
  • Performance6
  • Ride & Handling8
  • Costs10

Pros

Easy to drive smoothly

Lighter and more compact than other EVs

Excellent value for money

Cons

Very slow, hitting 0-62mph in over 13sec

Driving position and seat lack adjustability

Small battery, short range

The Dacia Spring is the UK’s cheapest full-size electric car, with prices starting from under £15,000. It also comes close to being the UK’s cheapest car overall, with the Dacia Sandero, the Kia Picanto and Fiat Panda the only cars that undercut it. 

Entry-level models are powered by a puny-sounding 44bhp electric motor, which hits 0-62mph in a – let’s say… leisurely… – 19.1sec.

Above all else, the Spring is a charming car. It’s smartly styled, well equipped and reasonably practical, but it’s the price that seals the deal.

Jack Warrick, Staff Writer

The higher-powered 64bhp variant reduces that to 13.7sec. Again, that might not sound all that quick (and it isn’t), but it’s about as quick as a 1.0-litre Volkswagen Up. 

Both models are equipped with a 26.8kWh battery, which is good for a claimed 137 miles of range overall, or 186 miles with some careful city driving. 

Equipment levels are good too, with a 7.0in touchscreen, electric windows, cruise control and rear parking sensors included as standard.

Read our Dacia Spring review

Save money with new Dacia deals from What Car?

Finance this car with Drivenfi

7. BYD Dolphin

7

https://www.autocar.co.uk/BYD%20Dolphin%20front%20tracking
  • Design7
  • Interior7
  • Performance7
  • Ride & Handling7
  • Costs8

Pros

Up to 265 miles of range

Starts from £25,490

Very well equipped

Cons

Charging speeds max out at just 88kW

Woolly handling

Frustrating control interfaces

If you are after value for money, particularly for an EV, the incoming Chinese car manufacturers are a good place to start.

The latest company with big plans for Europe is BYD, which is rapidly building a full range of electric cars. Its smallest model, for now, is the Dolphin.

That 265-mile range is genuinely impressive for a car of this size and price, and driven in a more cautious manner the Dolphin is very easy to get along with,

Sam Phillips, Staff Writer

It is by no means the best car on this list, but given the entry-level model costs just over £25,000, rising to more than £30,000 for the fully loaded long-range version, some of its flaws can be excused.

The handling is quite woolly and the leatherette is a bit naff, but the main problem of all BYDs is that the infotainment system is infuriating.

Even though the screen is huge, it hides important settings in deep sub-menus and doesn’t integrate with phone mirroring very well.

However, you get all the equipment you could possibly wish for, the ride is fairly plush and real-world range of comfortably over 200 miles is not to be sniffed at.

The Dolphin is also a tad larger than the other cars on this list, so it offers more interior space as well.

Read our BYD Dolphin review

Save money with new BYD deals from What Car?

Finance this car with Drivenfi

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8. Volkswagen ID 3

7

https://www.autocar.co.uk/Volkswagen%20ID%203%20front%20quarter%20dynamic
  • Design8
  • Interior8
  • Performance8
  • Ride & Handling7
  • Costs7

Pros

Comfortable ride

Improved interior

Spacious throughout

Cons

Dearer than close rivals

Touch-sensitive buttons still frustrate

Bigger batter and better tech tied to costlier trims

While the ID 3 managed to secure plenty of sales from the off, it was plagued by issues that dented its progress in becoming a true Golf successor. 

Early cars were afflicted by a poor infotainment touchscreen and a complex model line-up, not to mention the cabin that lacked material richness. 

Despite the price, Volkswagen has done a really thorough, objectively commendable job on its updated ID 3. 

Jack Warrick, Staff Writer

Volkswagen sought to assuage these faults by treating the ID 3 to a much-needed facelift, with the hatchback gaining a more eye-catching front end, a simpler model line-up and an uplift in material quality inside.

The touchscreen was also given a big overhaul, and it’s far easier to use than the one fitted to its predecessor – although the heating controls that sit below it are still touch-sensitive, as are those on the steering wheel. 

The ID 3 range now includes the 52kWh Pure, 58kWh Pro and 77kWh Pro S, with the last of those promising up to 345 miles of range. Prices start from around £30,000 , with the most expensive model being the sporty 322bhp GTX. 

As for the drive, there’s little to dislike. It doesn’t engage you like the technically related Cupra Born, but the steering is agile enough and it’s very easy to pilot in town and manoeuvre around car parks. And much like in the Golf, ride quality remains intact, even for a heavy compact car with big wheels

Read our Volkswagen ID 3 review

Save money with new Volkswagen ID 3 deals from What Car?

Finance this car with Drivenfi

9. Mazda MX-30

7

https://www.autocar.co.uk/Mazda%20MX-30%20front%20tracking
  • Design6
  • Interior8
  • Performance7
  • Ride & Handling7
  • Costs6

Pros

Upmarket interior

Smart styling

Sharp steering

Cons

Range is too short

Impractical rear doors

Not as light as it should be

Mazda has never been afraid to do things its own way, and the approach it has taken with its first all-electric car is no different. The MX-30 is therefore not quite what you might expect, but it’s an appealing proposition all the same. 

Toy-car looks are wrapped around an unusually small battery pack – just 35.5kWh, giving an official range of 124 miles – because Mazda believes owners simply won’t need more (and increasing the size of the battery would mean unnecessary cost and weight).

The MX-30 offers a comfortable driving position that’s pleasingly adjustable, and seats that offer good levels of support. Forward visibility is very good too.

James Attwood, Associate editor

The car is reasonably spacious inside, has an SUV-lite body that is very much on trend, and is trimmed in interesting materials that give the cabin a singularly cosy and likeable atmosphere.

It also includes distinctive rear-hinged back doors – a nod to the brand’s old rotary-powered RX-8 coupé – but we found them slightly impractical in day-to-day use.

Dynamically, the MX-30 also stands out – although only when you’re travelling with a bit of pace on an interesting road.

With 143bhp and 199lb ft, the electric motor didn’t blow our socks off in a straight line, but the weighting of the MX-30’s steering and the supple manner in which the suspension transfers weight while cornering are genuinely reminiscent of the MX-5 sports car. Around town, however, we found it a little plain.

Rapid charging at up to 50kW is possible so, if the limited range works for you, there is plenty to like about the unusual Mazda MX-30. And if it doesn’t, there’s always the rotary-engined, range-extended REV version. See? Mazda likes different – so do we.

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