BMW 228i vs Mercedes-Benz A200

What's the difference?

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BMW 228i
BMW 228i

2017 price

Mercedes-Benz A200
Mercedes-Benz A200

2020 price

Summary

2017 BMW 228i
2020 Mercedes-Benz A200
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Turbo 6, 3.0L

Turbo 4, 1.3L
Fuel Type
Premium Unleaded Petrol

Unleaded Petrol
Fuel Efficiency
7.4L/100km (combined)

5.7L/100km (combined)
Seating
4

5
Dislikes
  • Turbo-petrol fours' lag
  • Tight rear room
  • Fiddly (8sp auto) gear shift

  • So-so warranty
  • Okay only rear headroom
  • Tight rear door apertures
2017 BMW 228i Summary

If one is good, two must be better, right? Or twice as good. The question is whether that simple equation adds up for BMW's upgraded 1 and 2 Series siblings – the former, a range of five-door hatches, the latter, a line-up of cabriolets and coupes, with a major addition in the shape of the full-house, performance-focused M2.

Prices are up, and changes are mostly under the skin, so you're not getting  big visual bang for your extra bucks. But the new and improved 2 has plenty to offer when it comes to added spec and tech.

BMW invited us to the new car's Australian launch program along Tasmania's wet and wild west coast.

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2020 Mercedes-Benz A200 Summary

Meet the world’s most aerodynamically efficient passenger car. Mercedes-Benz says the drag co-efficient for this new sedan version of its fourth-generation A-Class is the lowest ever measured for a passenger vehicle.

Which is quite a claim, but you only have to look at it to see how much work has gone into marrying good looks with slippery aero performance.

The A-Class sedan is substantially longer and fractionally taller than its hatchback sibling, but does that mean it’s better, or simply different?

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Deep dive comparison

2017 BMW 228i 2020 Mercedes-Benz A200

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