Buy or lease the Fiat 500e at a price you’ll love
We take the hassle and haggle out of car buying by finding you great deals from local and national dealers
RRP
£28,195 - £34,195
Avg. Carwow saving £1,071 off RRP
Carwow price from
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Cash
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£27,210
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Monthly
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£293*
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Used
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£12,500
Colour guide
Metallic - Mineral grey
Free
The 500 Electric’s cute shape can lift an otherwise plain colour, but even it struggles with Mineral Grey. On a dull day, this just looks too flat and uninteresting. Sunny days help, but we just don’t get enough of those.
Pastel - Ice white
Free
White has long been pretty much the perfect colour for a Fiat 500, and the electric 500 Electric is no exception. Being a pastel finish, this Ice White has a pleasantly shiny warmth to it which looks great, and sidesteps the old hire-car trap.
Specifications
All the information you need on the Fiat 500e.
View specs
Metallic - Rose gold
£650
Rose Gold is always a risky colour, but the 500 Electric’s styling helps you to get away with it. Looks darker and more copper-like on cloudy days, but bright light really brings out the pink so be aware of that.
Metallic paint - Renault Metallic-Ocean Green
£650
This is a terrific colour for the 500 Electric, changing from a very intense green on a sunny day to a warmer, bluer shade when it clouds over. A very good choice.
Special pastel - Ice white
£650
While it's a colour that suits the Fiat 500 Electric and its dark trim pieces on the wheels, it doesn't help the chrome trim. The other colours are also more exciting when paired with the wheels and trim, but the white will do better on the used market.
Special pastel - Onyx black
£650
Onyx Black is a colour that could look a bit too plain on the 500 Electric, but it’s lifted by the contrasting elements of the daytime running lights and the 500 chrome badge on the nose. Accessorise it with a light-coloured interior and it works.
Special pastel - Red
£650
You can only buy this red paint if you buy the 500 Electric (RED) special edition, but it’s a cracking, vibrant, fire-hydrant red which looks great on the car. After all, an Italian car really ought to be red, oughtn’t it?
Tri-coat- Celestial blue
£1,700
Celestial Blue is a bit of a funny colour. In the right light, it looks complex and interesting, almost like one of those colour-changing metal flake paints from the early 2000s. If the light is flat and grey, though, so too is the colour. It’s almost like a mood ring, and a hugely expensive one at that.