Currently reading: MG plans to launch £20k electric city car in 2025

Chinese firm targets Dacia Spring EV with new MG 2 supermini, already well into development

MG plans to launch a £20,000 electric city car in the UK by the end of next year, Autocar can reveal.

Speaking on the sidelines of the new MG 3's unveiling at the Geneva motor show, product and planning boss David Allison outlined plans to expand the Chinese firm’s electric car line-up downwards below the 4, hinting at a compact rival to the Dacia Spring.

A concept for the new model – which could adopt the MG 2 name – already exists, Allison revealed, and could evolve into a production car in less than two years, speed being particularly important in this instance so that MG can take advantage of the dearth of small, affordable EVs currently on the market.

He said: “I think that it's an area that no one has really exploited successfully yet, because the focus has been very much on larger cars and really where they can charge the amount of money for people that are willing to pay it.

“But I think there's a huge opportunity for someone who can get to the four-metre EV for around €20,000 [£17,000]. I think someone can do that with an acceptable range, decent-sized car about that price, and I think that person will clean up with it. And why not us?”

Allison added that he has "been impressed with how quickly things tend to happen" at MG.

He explained: "Product development is clearly a long-term thing, but it's not inconceivable that you could go from concept to production in as little as two years."

"It would be great if we could get something like that in the market by the end of next year. It’s still a couple of years away, to be perfectly honest. But I don't think it's inconceivable. And I think if we can do it, I'd really like to do it."

MG's new entry-level model isn't envisioned to undercut the £17,000 Spring but will nonetheless be comfortably among the cheapest full-sized EVs in Europe, with a price of around £20,000 slotting it in below the likes of the BYD Dolphin and Vauxhall Corsa Electric.

MG will need to put some clear air between any new entry-level EV and the existing £25,000 4 hatchback, in any case, to give it a distinct position on the market.

MG 4 front tracking

Advertisement

Read our review

Car review

Is the electric hatchback a good car for the money, or a good car in its own right?

Back to top

“We need to start giving people more accessible cars at the price they feel comfortable affording, and that's what this industry is really, really good at,” Allison said.

It's likely to be a bespoke product, designed and engineered primarily to suit the European market, as MG parent company SAIC doesn't currently sell any small urban EVs in China that MG has deemed appropriate for export to Europe. It would, however, be built in China.

MG wouldn't, for example, seek to import its Indian-market Comet city car – which is based on the Wuling Air EV – to the UK, and nor is sibling brand Roewe’s Clever hatchback under consideration.

MG comet front

Nonetheless, there is potential for this new MG to be sold worldwide, with Allison highlighting that SAIC’s European design centre in London works on a whole range of cars that aren’t sold in Europe and the UK is the brand’s best-selling market globally, which gives the UK division a lot of influence over SAIC’s global operations.

“It's the spiritual home of the brand; we're seen as being quite pivotal, quite important,” said Allison.

Notably, he added, MG’s UK engineering centre in Longbridge – on the site of the old MG Rover factory – still plays a significant role in refining MG’s global products for the European market, having tested prototypes of the new Cyberster sports car and 3 supermini for several months in the UK ahead of launch. It would play a similar role in refining a new EV supermini for European dealerships.

Back to top

It's unclear whether the ‘2’ would use a variation of the larger 4’s Modular Scalable platform, as will be the case for the next-generation ZS crossover and HS SUV. It's likely that MG will seek to use an older, simpler architecture with a view to minimising production costs.

Join our WhatsApp community and be the first to read about the latest news and reviews wowing the car world. Our community is the best, easiest and most direct place to tap into the minds of Autocar, and if you join you’ll also be treated to unique WhatsApp content. You can leave at any time after joining - check our full privacy policy here.

Felix Page

Felix Page
Title: Deputy editor

Felix is Autocar's deputy editor, responsible for leading the brand's agenda-shaping coverage across all facets of the global automotive industry - both in print and online.

He has interviewed the most powerful and widely respected people in motoring, covered the reveals and launches of today's most important cars, and broken some of the biggest automotive stories of the last few years. 

Join the debate

Comments
4
Add a comment…
si73 27 February 2024
Seems optimistic when the new hybrid 3 is starting at this price point
ianp55 26 February 2024

Thought that MG weren't going to produce an EV smaller than the MG4? why the change of mind? is it because entry price for the MG4 has now reached to a fiver less than £27k or could it be that Renualt & Stellantis models will start undercutting them.

FastRenaultFan 26 February 2024
Let's hopes it's better than the new 3.