Fiat 500X vs Mazda MX-30

What's the difference?

VS
Fiat 500X
Fiat 500X

2019 price

Mazda MX-30
Mazda MX-30

$22,990 - $28,778

2022 price

Summary

2019 Fiat 500X
2022 Mazda MX-30
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Turbo 4, 1.4L

Not Applicable, 0.0L
Fuel Type
Premium Unleaded Petrol

Electric
Fuel Efficiency
5.7L/100km (combined)

0.0L/100km (combined)
Seating
5

5
Dislikes
  • Iffy transmission
  • Oddball ride
  • Slow

  • City-only range
  • Questionable value
  • Not very practical
2019 Fiat 500X Summary

Fiat's indomitable 500 is one of the great survivors - not even VW's recently deceased New Beetle could keep riding the nostalgia wave, partly because it made itself just that little bit out-of-touch by not being a car anyone can buy. The 500 avoided that, particularly in its home market, and is still going strong.

Fiat added the 500X compact SUV a few years ago and at first I thought it was a daft idea. It's a polarising car, partly because some people complain it's capitalising on the 500's history. Well, duh. It's worked out well for Mini, so why not?

I've driven one every year for the last couple so I was keen to see what's up and whether it's still one of the weirdest cars on the road.

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2022 Mazda MX-30 Summary

Mazda’s MX-30 is an odd one. It’s Mazda’s third small SUV and its first production electric car, yet it wears the brand’s MX sports car prefix and originally launched as a combustion mild hybrid.

Of course, Mazda is no stranger to automobile enigmas, with left-of-field rotary choices in its past, and its semi-combustion SkyActiv-X engines showing a different take on the future, but can the brand’s innovative nature help make its first fully electric car a hit?

I drove an MX-30 E35 Astina shortly after its Australian launch to attempt to unravel its mysteries. Will it find its place in an increasingly busy EV marketplace? Read on to find out.

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Deep dive comparison

2019 Fiat 500X 2022 Mazda MX-30

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