Mercedes-Benz C350 vs Mercedes-Benz CLS350

What's the difference?

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Mercedes-Benz C350
Mercedes-Benz C350

2018 price

Mercedes-Benz CLS350
Mercedes-Benz CLS350

2018 price

Summary

2018 Mercedes-Benz C350
2018 Mercedes-Benz CLS350
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Diesel Turbo 4, 2.1L

Turbo 4, 2.0L
Fuel Type
Diesel

Premium Unleaded Petrol
Fuel Efficiency
4.7L/100km (combined)

7.8L/100km (combined)
Seating
4

5
Dislikes
  • Engine loud under heavy acceleration
  • Gearbox can feel clunky in lower gears
  • C200 not overly dynamic

  • Limited rear legroom
  • Higher entry price into range
  • No diesel variant
2018 Mercedes-Benz C350 Summary

If you’re picturing the premium mid-size segment in Australia, you’re almost certainly picturing Mercedes-Benz. Honestly, the premium carmaker has the kind of powerful and unquestioning stranglehold on the segment that would have despots and dictators turning green with envy.

The C-Class often outsells its nearest competitor by a factor of two to one. Even more impressive, that nearest competitor is another Mercedes, the CLA. Audi and BMW are left off in the middle distance, duking it out for third and fourth place.

So yes, the C-Class is a very important car for Mercedes. And this new one, updated for 2019, is even more so. It’s the first major update in the current car’s four-year lifespan, with a handful of exterior tweaks, some new key cabin technology and, most importantly, a new and clever engine option for its top-selling version.

So is that enough to keep the C-Class at the top of the mid-size pile?

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2018 Mercedes-Benz CLS350 Summary

There are people who probably wish the Mercedes-Benz CLS would just go away. Call security, have it escorted off the premises. That’s probably because they don’t agree with its styling. For them, it’s not how a large four-door Mercedes-Benz should look, with its ‘rude’ coupe roofline. 

But for some of you those looks are exactly why you want it, and there’s enough of you out there for Mercedes-Benz to tell us at the launch of the new-generation CLS that the model is here to stay.

“You don’t surrender a segment… a vehicle has to do 100 units to justify bringing it – this will do 100 units no problem sat all,” were the exact words from Benz’s head of communications David McCarthy.

You could say Benz created the four-door coupe segment when it launched its first-generation CLS 14 years ago, triggering its rivals to fire back with their own four-door coupes - the Audi A7 and BMW 6 Series Gran Coupe.

Far from surrendering, the CLS has evolved again with this third-generation bringing new engines and styling. So, what do you gain and what will you have to surrender (for lack of a better word) if you choose to go down the non-traditional route of the CLS?

I found out when I drove the new CLS 450 4Matic for the first time on Australian roads at its recent launch.

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Deep dive comparison

2018 Mercedes-Benz C350 2018 Mercedes-Benz CLS350

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