Abarth 500E vs Mercedes-Benz Esprinter

What's the difference?

VS
Abarth 500E
Abarth 500E

2024 price

Mercedes-Benz Esprinter
Mercedes-Benz Esprinter

$104,864 - $121,593

2026 price

Summary

2024 Abarth 500E
2026 Mercedes-Benz Esprinter
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Not Applicable, 0.0L

0.0L
Fuel Type
Electric

Electric
Fuel Efficiency
0.0L/100km (combined)

0.0L/100km (combined)
Seating
4

2
Dislikes
  • Underwhelming range promises
  • A lot of money for not a lot of car
  • Can be too harsh on broken roads

  • High purchase price
  • Partly blocked side mirror view
  • Big payload drop for max towing
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 Mercedes-Benz Esprinter Summary

The Mercedes-Benz Sprinter range of vans and cab-chassis models competes for buyers in the Light Duty (3501-8000kg GVM) segment of Australia’s highly competitive Heavy Commercial vehicle market.

In 2024 the German manufacturer expanded its diverse turbo-diesel van range by launching a full-electric variant called the eSprinter, which for the first time offered local buyers the opportunity to drive with zero tailpipe emissions.

We recently spent a working week with this unique offering to assess how competently it could fulfil the diverse job requirements of private tradie buyers and fleet operators.

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Deep dive comparison

2024 Abarth 500E 2026 Mercedes-Benz Esprinter

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