Alfa Romeo News

2025 Alfa Romeo Junior shock low price
By Byron Mathioudakis · 02 Apr 2025
Australia’s premium small SUV hybrid class is about to experience a shake-up with the arrival of the Alfa Romeo Junior.
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New Alfa Giulia and Stelvio are on the way
By Chris Thompson · 19 Mar 2025
Alfa Romeo confirms a new-generation Giulia and Stelvio on shared Stellantis platform.
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Stellantis announces new battery partnership
By Samuel Irvine · 31 Jan 2025
Claims of battery breakthroughs have lately been reserved for Chinese electric car brands, but this time the news has come from automotive mega-group Stellantis.
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The car brands that lost sales in 2024
By Chris Thompson · 17 Jan 2025
Australia’s new car market rose very slightly in volume in 2024 compared to 2023 - but it wasn’t good news across the board.
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Chinese EVs 'many years ahead'
By Samuel Irvine · 18 Dec 2024
Just weeks after stepping down as the head of European-American automotive conglomerate Stellantis, Carlos Tavares is standing by the decisions that forced the embattled former CEO into resignation.
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Stellantis cuts ICE output to avoid fines
By James Cleary · 23 Oct 2024
In the face of ever-tightening vehicle emission performance standards for car and light commercial vehicles applied by the EU’s European Commission and growing inventory, particularly in North America, the world’s fourth-largest carmaker Stellantis has decided to reduce production of selected petrol and diesel models across its brand portfolio.
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Why Alfa’s first EV is a small SUV
By Tim Nicholson · 29 Jul 2024
Alfa Romeo is known for sleek sports cars, compact hatchbacks and sporty sedans, so why is its first electric car a small SUV?
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Alfa Romeo benchmarked against these models
By Tim Nicholson · 16 Jul 2024
Alfa Romeo’s smallest model since the MiTo hatchback is also one of its most crucial.To make sure it stacks up, Alfa’s engineering team benchmarked the Junior against some interesting competitors during development.The sub-compact SUV will be offered in hybrid and electric guise in Europe in the coming months and the electric - or Elettrica - version has been locked in for an Australian debut at some point in 2025.The flagship of the range is the sporty Junior Elettrica Veloce, which we recently drove at the international launch in Italy.Speaking with Australian journalists at the international first drive, Alfa Romeo Head of Products Daniel Guzzafame said there were a range of different models that Alfa used to benchmark the Junior, and those models varied depending on the Junior’s powertrain and grade.“So for some performance is mainly the comfort. The Volvo is the right competitor so we compared that to the EX30 on that. But Volvo driving dynamics is not the right competitor. It would be too easy to say we are better than Volvo, okay. So I have the feeling of driving the XC40, it's like being on a truck. I love the car (XC40) but it's just not the intent,” he said.“So we took other references for that, so low-speed handling and dynamics it's the Mini, and high speed in electric there was not really much so we tested the BMW i4 and the Ioniq 5 N for the handling.“But again, that's because the reality is that there is not really something that can compare. And we were wanting to do something that was different from anything that was on the market. So it was not easy to get something really one-to-one compare.”While the Volvo and Mini were to be expected, the BMW i4 was a surprise.All Elettrica grades come with a 54kWh battery and the base Elettrica delivers 115kW/260Nm, while the Veloce pumps out 207kW/345Nm. The driving range is 410km and 334km respectively.The engineers focussed on injecting Alfa Romeo DNA into the Junior, ensuring it has Alfa’s light and direct steering, and handling prowess thanks to a sporty suspension setup, a mechanical self-locking differential as well as front and rear anti roll bars and sportier brakes.The Junior has a lot of weight on its sculpted shoulders as it is tasked with driving sales in Europe and in many global markets. It will not, however, be offered in the United States as it is seen as too small and niche for that market.In Australia it will face competition from rivals like the Lexus LBX, as well as a pair of models - the Peugeot E-2008 and incoming Jeep Avenger - that both share the same eCMP Stellantis platform as the Junior.When asked if the Junior had the potential to be Alfa’s best-selling model globally, Guzzafame said: “In terms of global sales, we'll see,” he said. “It will depend on the weight of Europe versus the rest of the world. If I look at today's line-up, next year, probably it will be, but it's also because we have a range to be renovated and in different countries that will need to start so next year probably the weight of Europe will be higher because of this model. And so if it's not going to be the most sold, it will be for sure at par with the others.”He added that other upcoming new Alfa Romeo models have the potential to be global best sellers, but that the Junior would top the brand’s tally in Europe given the continent’s preference for small, efficient cars.Other Alfa models on the horizon include the next-gen Stelvio next year, the next-gen Giulia in 2026 and then a yet-to-be revealed model that is expected to be larger than the Stelvio.
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Italian brand’s electric future laid out
By Tim Nicholson · 15 Jul 2024
Alfa Romeo is in the middle of launching one of its most important models in decades, but there are a bunch of new models on the horizon that should get the Alfisti excited.
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Alfa Junior gets a sporty headline act
By John Law · 21 Jun 2024
Alfa Romeo has revised details of the Veloce version of its Junior small SUV.It is the new pure electric halo for the Audi Q2, Mercedes-Benz EQA, BMW X2 and Lexus LBX rival.The Italian marque has upped power from an initial 180kW rating to 207kW while torque sits at 345Nm from the single front-mounted electric motor.Choosing the 207kW figure was no accident, with the Junior small SUV's outputs then matching Veloce versions of the Giulia sedan and Stelvio medium SUV.Along with 27kW more power, Alfa has retuned the Junior Veloce's chassis, adding sharper steering, 25mm lower springs and firmer anti-roll bars.No stopping there. The Veloce also features larger 380mm front brake rotors clamped by four-piston brake calipers, a Torsen locking differential OEM-tweaked tyres fitted to 20-inch alloy wheels.Alfa says the same teams that worked on the Audi RS4, BMW M3 and Mercedes-AMG C63-rivalling Giulia Quadrifoglio sports sedan have been involved in the process.This is not a full-fat Quadrifoglio version of the Junior, though. There have been no announcements of that nature.Underneath the Junior's sharply-styled bodywork sits a 54kWh battery pack – identical to the Peugeot E-2008 and Jeep Avenger with which it shares its 'Common Modular Platform' (CMP) – giving it a circa-410km driving range.Fast-charging is capped at 100kW (DC) for sub-30 minute 10-80 per cent recuperation.A petrol-electric hybrid version producing 100kW is also part of the range along with a detuned 116kW electric version.The Junior – previously known as Milano – is expected in Australia in the second half of 2025. Full pricing and detailed specifications will become available closer to the Junior's release.
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