City driving goes green with Mini Electric

Mini’s take on electric vehicles is appropriately simple, lightweight, relatively affordable and compact. Its first production EV – available to order now with first deliveries in March 2020 – is recognisably adapted from a regular Mini Cooper S three-door. However, it swaps the latter’s petrol engine for a 184hp electric motor powered by a 32.6 kWh battery that's good for 124 miles.
That might not seem far compared to some other new EVs’ greater mileage possibilities, but this on-brand ‘small-is-good’ approach to battery size doesn’t compromise the existing amount of cabin space or luggage area. It also shows that the Mini Electric – like the imminent Honda e – is targeting urban-based customers or suburban second-car users where a shorter range is entirely in line with their actual everyday requirements. Charging via a socket located beneath the regular fuel filler cap takes 35 minutes to 80 per cent from a 50kW fast DC charger, but due to the smaller 32.6 kWh battery and range, 0-100 per cent can still be achieved with a more typical 11kW charger in a decent 3.5 hours. This is practical.
To differentiate the Mini Electric sufficiently in design terms, the car gets a closed-off front grille, slightly more aero wheels, contrast-coloured wing mirrors, subtle EV plug logo badging, and on the inside, a new slimmer 5.5” digital driver display, replacing the regular Mini’s somewhat bulky analogue one. In keeping with Mini values, the car should be great fun to drive, promising 0-62mph in 7.3 seconds – just like the petrol Cooper S – and might even handle better, due to its new powertrain’s positioning (a full test drive will come later).
Either way, the initial specification sounds promising, with the electric motor housed upfront to power the front wheels and the T-shaped battery pack positioned low-down and with the T’s crossbar below the rear seats. The lower weight of the small battery versus a bigger range version – at 1365kg the Electric is only 145kg more than a petrol Cooper S automatic – is also a handling asset and its low placement results in a centre of gravity at least 30 millimetres lower than in the Mini Cooper S too.
Crucially and unusually for an EV from any brand, Mini’s smaller battery makes the car cheaper to produce and has been part of the reason the brand has decided to match the price of equivalent performance combustion-engined versions. UK prices start from £24,400 and rise to £30,400 (including Government grant). This should see a real breakthrough in sales as ‘going green’ in this case doesn’t come with an initial price penalty (and will make the already-established lower EV running costs all the more enjoyable).
The brand is hoping to sell about 4,000 units a year in the UK alone, which is more than the current Convertible and close to the Clubman’s circa 5,000 units. And as the model will be made on the same manufacturing line as its combustion-engined counterparts, there is flexibility to increase production too. Long and short – this product is not intended to be a high-priced, small-run, tokenistic environmental move. Plaudits for that.
INFORMATION
Mini Electric, from £24,300. mini.co.uk
Wallpaper* Newsletter
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
Guy Bird is a London-based writer, editor and consultant specialising in cars and car design, but also covers aviation, architecture, street art, sneakers and music. His journalistic experience spans more than 25 years in the UK and global industry. See more at www.guybird.com
-
In Shanghai, Hermès conjures a ‘cosmopolitan explorer’ for its one-off show on the Huangpu River
Nadège Vanhée, artistic director of Hermès’ womenswear collections, presented ‘The Second Chapter’ of her A/W 2025 collection earlier this evening (13 June 2025) against the futuristic skyline of Shanghai
-
Out of office: the Wallpaper* editors’ picks of the week
It was a jam-packed week for the Wallpaper* staff, entailing furniture, tech and music launches and lots of good food – from afternoon tea to omakase
-
Peugeot brings back a classic performance badge for the electric era: meet the E-208 GTi
Peugeot has unveiled the new E-208 GTi, a performance EV designed to hark back to a golden age of compact sports cars
-
Slate is an ultra-simple EV truck intended as an affordable and customisable workhorse
Slate designer Tisha Johnson discusses her role at the US electric truck start-up, a company that wants its customers to have complete freedom of expression
-
We drive the World and UK Car of the Year, the all-electric Kia EV3
The new Kia EV3 is an EV for the masses that doesn’t skimp on design detail, features and overall functional elegance
-
The Peugeot E-5008 is an adept but ostentatious take on the all-electric SUV
Peugeot has swapped its seductive design language for something shoutier and less discrete as it attempts to conquer the electric SUV segment with the new E-5008
-
The Micra (finally) goes electric as Nissan ramps up its range of EVs
The compact Nissan Micra was once a global bestseller. After getting an early head start on electric mobility, the Japanese giant is looking to a new version of its small car to recharge its status
-
Mika Cars wants to build the Mino, a sporty, ultra-compact electric two-seater for the open road
An evolution of Mika’s Meon electric beach buggy, the little Mino is an ultra-light EV with big-car aspirations
-
Our pick of the reveals at the 2025 New York Auto Show, from concept SUVs to new EVs
Interest in overseas brands remained strong at this year’s NY Auto Show despite the threat of tariffs designed to boost American-owned brands
-
Mercedes-Benz previews its next-gen people mover with an ultra-luxury EV concept
The Mercedes-Benz Vision V Concept is an art deco picture palace on wheels, designed to immerse passengers in parallel worlds as they travel
-
2025 Seoul Mobility Show report: all that's new and notable
Opened at a time of high national drama, the 2025 Seoul Mobility Show has gone on to underscore Korea’s place at the cutting edge of the auto industry. Guy Bird was there