The original, rear-engined Fiat Cinquecento was launched in 1957 and it sported a fold-back fabric roof, manually operated of course. With the advent of the new Fiat 500 things have been done in reverse order; first came the hatchback (the engine's now in the front), then the sporty Abarth and now the convertible 'C'. Of course you want one, but here's a test anyway!
Fiat 500C consumer car reviews
Fiat 500C lease prices
Fiat 500C new and nearly new
Fuel consumption for the 1.4 is 46.3mpg (combined) while the 1.3 manages an impressive 67.3.mpg. CO2 is rated at 140g/km for the 1.4 (£170 annual road tax) and 110g/km for the 1.3 (just £35 road tax). The 1.4 is insurance group 7 while the 1.3 is group 5. The 1.3 scores again on purchase price because in 'Pop' trim the £12,700 1.3 is only £195 more than the £12,505 1.4 Pop. Obviously you can bump up those prices by going for the up-spec Lounge version or by ticking option boxes, (satnav, 100-watt stereo, Dualogic gearbox, Bi-Xenon headlamps and so on) but in my view all that rather defeats the marvellous ethos of both this and especially the original '57 500.
Read the full Fiat 500C road tests
RoadTestReports.co.uk provides road tests reports written by members of the Guild of Motoring Writers. These reports are complemented by car reviews submitted by the members of the public who drive the vehicles day in day out.
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