Fiat 500
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Fiat 500 overall verdict
Additional Info
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The Fiat 500 is the long-awaited and well-received revival of an Italian icon. What it lacks in terms of interior packaging it more than makes up with sheer style and driver involvement. What we’re all waiting for is the hot little Abarth version.
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Comfort
A nicely pliant ride actually makes the 500 surprisingly refined through the manholes and potholes of urban driving. The only drawback is an oddly high driving position that can make taller drivers feel precariously close to the roofline.
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Performance
The 1.4-litre 16v needs near 11 seconds to get you to 100km/h, the extra expense over the basic model is hardly worth it.
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Cool
At the moment the new 500 is rare and eye-catching. Whether this will endure is debatable. Expect this to be the new, new Mini. Ubiquitous, and frequently driven by highly slappable fashion designers and smug media types.
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Quality
The bespoke and impressively retro-looking cabin in the 500 not only looks great, but also feels fairly expensive. Cheaper Fiats don't have a great reputation for reliability, but the 500 has yet to prove itself either way.
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Handling
Tall, narrow cars like this are bound to suffer from a little bit of pitch and roll, but the 500 still feels sure-footed and, vitally, entertaining when you're slinging it around a bit.
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Practicality
Improvement over the original 500 is not, 60 years on, anything to feel smug about. The 500 is still cramped in the back, a bit too lofty from the driver's seat and not blessed with the ease of access of its cheaper sister the Punto.
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Running costs
The 500 is annoyingly pricey, but desirability ought to keep its secondhand value up. Low insurance and great fuel returns mean it's not going to bleed you dry either.
More Fiat 500 cars we've driven...
- March 2008


