Abarth 595 vs GWM Tank 500

What's the difference?

VS
Abarth 595
Abarth 595

2018 price

GWM Tank 500
GWM Tank 500

$64,490 - $78,490

2026 price

Summary

2018 Abarth 595
2026 GWM Tank 500
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Turbo 4, 1.4L

Inline 4, 2.0L
Fuel Type
Unleaded Petrol

Unleaded Petrol/Electric
Fuel Efficiency
5.8L/100km (combined)

2.1L/100km (combined)
Seating
4

5
Dislikes
  • Terrible driving position
  • Ride not great around town
  • No reversing camera

  • Some body-roll
  • Intrusive driver-assist tech
  • Fuel use not as good as hoped
2018 Abarth 595 Summary

Since 1949, Abarth has been giving the venerable Italian brand, Fiat, a patina of performance, based largely on giant-killing feats in small modified cars like the Fiat 600 of the 1960s.

More recently, the brand has been revived to boost the fortunes of the smallest Fiat on sale in Australia. Known formally as the Abarth 595, the tiny hatch packs a bit of a surprise under its distinctive snout.

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2026 GWM Tank 500 Summary

The arrival of the GWM Tank 500 Ultra PHEV is noteworthy because it’s the first plug-in hybrid Tank model in Australia.

It’s also a major event for the Aussie adventure-travel community because it’s a plug-in hybrid 4WD with five seats, high- and low-range gearing, and a front, centre and rear diff lock.

The Tank 500 PHEV gets more power and torque than its hybrid stablemate, offers about 120km electric-only driving range (listed), and it can be used as a 6kW mobile power station (V2L) at your campsite. Towing remains at 3000kg.

There’s a lot in this Tank’s favour: it’s a body-on-ladder-frame chassis large 4WD with a packed standard features list and real off-road adventure potential.

All of that – and more – for under $80 grand.

But does the plug-in set-up add anything substantial in terms of daily driveability or does it simply make this Tank an $80,000 camp-site generator?

Read on.

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Deep dive comparison

2018 Abarth 595 2026 GWM Tank 500

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