Mercedes-Benz A180 vs BMW 528i

What's the difference?

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Mercedes-Benz A180
Mercedes-Benz A180

$25,490 - $36,990

2020 price

BMW 528i
BMW 528i

2017 price

Summary

2020 Mercedes-Benz A180
2017 BMW 528i
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Turbo 4, 1.3L

Turbo 4, 2.0L
Fuel Type
Unleaded Petrol

Premium Unleaded Petrol
Fuel Efficiency
5.7L/100km (combined)

6.1L/100km (combined)
Seating
5

5
Dislikes
  • So-so warranty
  • Okay only rear headroom
  • Tight rear door apertures

  • Price hikes on almost every model
  • Six-cylinder engine reserved for most expensive models
  • Apple CarPlay a cost option
2020 Mercedes-Benz A180 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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2017 BMW 528i Summary

Andrew Chesterton road tests and reviews the new BMW 5 Series 520d, 530i, 530d and 540i sedans with specs, fuel consumption and verdict at its Australian launch in Victoria.

When we're all living under the cruel rule of our robot overlords, the few remaining human historians will track the genesis of our downfall to the technology explosion that occurred in 2017's new-car market. 

Never before have car companies focused so hard on producing cars that can't just be driven, but that can drive themselves, negotiating corners, unexpected obstacles and changing traffic conditions without ever needing to consult the human actually sitting behind the steering wheel.

And BMW's all-new 5 Series sedan takes yet another a step forward, eliminating the need for said human to even be sitting in the car. Owners can instead move their 5 Series in and out of tight parking spaces simply by pressing a button on their key.

The Active Key function is admittedly a $1,600 cost option, but it proves the techno-focus applied to the seventh-generation of BMW's executive express, which will land in Australian dealerships this month. Every car is also fitted with what the German brand calls its personal co-pilot; a series of nifty cameras and radars that allow the car to be driven completely autonomously for spells of 30 seconds.

But the question is, has all this new technology come at the cost of regular, old-school driver enjoyment?

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Deep dive comparison

2020 Mercedes-Benz A180 2017 BMW 528i

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