Citroen C1

Breadcrumbs

Car details navigation

Citroen C1 overall verdict

Citroen C1
Rated 14 out of 20

Additional Info

  • More supermini than the new Mini. But you always lean towards the Toyota-branded one for some reason. Probably an innate mistrust of anything French

  • Our buying tip

    Buy the Aygo. It has better residuals. It’s a confidence thing

Part of the C1/Peugeot 107/Toyota Aygo triumvirate, the Citroen C1 is a supermini that makes budget-car shopping at least a little bit more interesting. Cheap doesn’t have to be dull.

  • Comfort

    The C1 can get a bit choppy - a short wheelbase and firm damping see to that - but it's not a bad performance. The three-cylinder engine can get a bit buzzy when pushed, but it'll cope with revs. You can manage short motorway trips too, though a cross-continental jaunt is probably a bit beyond the comfort zone.

    Rated 11 out of 20
  • Performance

    Two engines on offer; a natty little 68bhp three-pot, 1.0-litre petrol or a 1.4-litre, four-cylinder diesel with 55bhp. The three-cylinder is great, hitting 62mph in 13.7 seconds, which sounds slow but feels fine in the car. The diesel is slower, hitting the benchmark in 15.6 seconds, but it's a bit more relaxed and you don't have to batter the five-speed manual to get the best out of it. Neither car hits 100mph. But who cares?

    Rated 9 out of 20
  • Cool

    Not really. But as an anti-fashion statement for an urban-based humanoid then perfectly acceptable. You can justify, but you won't be showing off about it.

    Rated 13 out of 20
  • Quality

    Toyota builds all three variants, so although they are definitely built to a budget with fairly Spartan spec, the dash is funky and well put together. Nothing feels like it'll break, just don't expect a leather dungeon.

    Rated 11 out of 20
  • Handling

    Nippy with a firm ride and precise handling, the car makes short work of beating congestion. Body lean is good through twisty roads but grip is lost quickly when pushing on too hard. The C1/107/Aygo rides bumps well, but they can still be felt in the cabin.

    Rated 14 out of 20
  • Practicality

    For town-based driving little beats these three, simply because they are small, easy to see out of and cheap-but-not-tacky. You can seat four - something a Smart can't do. There isn't any luggage space to speak of though, despite that all-glass tailgate it manages just 139 litres. You can fold the seats down in a 50/50 stylie to get 751 litres, but the access to it is really quite, erm, quirky.

    Rated 12 out of 20
  • Running costs

    Doesn't get better than this. Insurance and servicing costs will be low while the fuel economy is excellent - the C1 1.4 HDI returns a staggering 68.9mpg.

    Rated 20 out of 20

Now share it

More

More Citroen C1 cars we've driven...

Rated 12 out of 20
Citroen C1 1.0i VT
April 2009

Advertisement

Find your next car now

Over 350,000 used cars available

Advertisement

Cars for sale: Citroen C1

Powered by Auto Trader
Citroen C1

Search for a used Citroen C1.

Pop your postcode in here (or leave it and search for cars near the Top Gear office. Errr?)