Abarth 500E vs Mahindra XUV3XO

What's the difference?

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Abarth 500E
Abarth 500E

2024 price

Mahindra XUV3XO
Mahindra XUV3XO

2026 price

Summary

2024 Abarth 500E
2026 Mahindra XUV3XO
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Not Applicable, 0.0L

Fuel Type
Electric

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Fuel Efficiency
0.0L/100km (combined)

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Seating
4

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Dislikes
  • Underwhelming range promises
  • A lot of money for not a lot of car
  • Can be too harsh on broken roads

  • No available blind spot and rear cross-traffic alerts
  • Requires premium petrol
  • Steering feels too light
2024 Abarth 500E Summary

Meet the Abarth 500e, the mad-hatter sibling to the very good and all-electric Fiat 500e, and the Italian brand's first attempt at a bonafide EV hot hatch.

It's tiny, tough and – despite the lack of engine and exhaust – it burbles manically when you fire it up.

So does this mean Italy’s pint-sized, petrol-powered icon has a future in the all-electric era? Let’s go find out.

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2026 Mahindra XUV3XO Summary

Mahindra & Mahindra, to use the full name, is an automotive company with a long history, loyal following and steady vision.

With annual profits in the billions, it is celebrating its 80th anniversary by looking upwards and outwards, developing new technologies and – ambitiously – a wider global footprint.

Australia is more familiar territory, though, thanks to a 20-year presence with tractors, Pik-Up workhorse and, more recently, the rugged Scorpio 4x4 and slick XUV700 family SUV, which replaced the XUV500.

The new XUV 3XO, however, should dramatically broaden the brand’s appeal, as a headfirst dive into a pool teaming with cheap yet sophisticated small SUVs from China, Korea and Japan like the Chery Tiggo 4, GWM Haval Jolion, MG ZS, Hyundai Venue and Kia Stonic.

Our first taste of Mahindra’s smallest model, at its massive proving ground in India, reveals something quite unexpected.

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Deep dive comparison

2024 Abarth 500E 2026 Mahindra XUV3XO

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