Mercedes-Benz CLA vs Mercedes-Benz E220

What's the difference?

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Mercedes-Benz CLA
Mercedes-Benz CLA

2020 price

Mercedes-Benz E220
Mercedes-Benz E220

$26,990 - $46,800

2017 price

Summary

2020 Mercedes-Benz CLA
2017 Mercedes-Benz E220
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Twin Turbo 4, 2.0L

Turbo 4, 2.0L
Fuel Type
Premium Unleaded Petrol

Diesel
Fuel Efficiency
7.5L/100km (combined)

5.7L/100km (combined)
Seating
5

5
Dislikes
  • Harsh ride
  • Limited rear-seat room
  • Divisive styling

  • No longer a seven seater
  • 2.0-litre diesel isn’t as punchy in All-Terrain guise
  • Spare wheel optional even without third row seat
2020 Mercedes-Benz CLA Summary

Mercedes has long been the leader in niche filling, and we’d argue that no other model encapsulates that more than the CLA four-door coupe.

Now in its second-generation form, the CLA is based on Mercedes’ MFA2 small car platform that also underpins the A-Class small car range, B-Class tallboy hatchback and GLA crossover, but is actually dimensionally longer than the one-size up C-Class.

However, while the C-Class might offer more conventional styling, Mercedes says the CLA is targeted towards a younger demographic that puts more weight on design and aesthetics.

The previous generation CLA was topped by a hardcore 45 version, which makes a return here, but new this time around is the less-potent, but still AMG-badged, 35 variant to plug the gap between mainstream grades and the range-topper.

After living with the car for a week, here are our thoughts on the new baby AMG CLA.

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2017 Mercedes-Benz E220 Summary

Aside from gull-winged supercars, stunning sports cars and coupes, plus saloons of all sizes that define status around the globe, Mercedes-Benz is also famous for its elegant yet very practical station wagons. Or Estates in Merc-speak.

Long before SUVs really existed (and two years before the industrial G-Class first appeared), the three-pointed star was offering wagon-bodied versions of its core sedan models that allowed owners to mix pleasure with business, or simply pleasure while carrying vast cargo in the back.

Merc Estates have never simply been an extended roof tacked onto the back, with a depth of design that integrates cargo restraints like the characteristic retractable net, but also generally including an extra two seats that fold neatly into the floor. No, your giant Mazda CX-9 wasn’t the first to do this.

Fast forward to 2017, and the popularity of the ever-expanding array of Merc SUVs and SUV-coupe spin-offs is threatening to render the Estate obsolete, outside Europe at least.


We’re still big fans of the wagon bodystyle, and Mercedes says there are enough loyal Merc wagonists to keep them on the radar for Australia. The latest C-Class Estate is actually proving more popular than the version it replaced, but the bigger E-Class is more of a niche offering.

Which is where the new E 220 d All-Terrain comes in. For the first time, Mercedes has added a bit of off-road SUV flavour and ability to the E-Class Estate, and with this extra sparkle it makes sense for it to be the sole long-roof version of the W213-generation E-Class to be brought down under.

But does this extra sparkle retain the elegance that keeps E-Class Estate buyers coming back for more?

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Deep dive comparison

2020 Mercedes-Benz CLA 2017 Mercedes-Benz E220

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