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Smart Transforms: From Microcars to a Powerful Family SUV Rivaling Tesla
One-time microcar maker goes after the Tesla Model Y with a tech-heavy family SUV packing up to 637bhp Let’s get the obvious bits out of the way, then: 2165mm, 1720kg and 576bhp. Those aren’t the headline specs of the new Smart #5 but the differences in maximum length, weight and power between this new five-up family SUV and the diddy Fortwo city car that first bore the Smart badge in 1998.With the third generation of that car – which could fit inside this latest model’s wheelbase with nearly 400mm to spare – now retired and the #5 on its way to dealerships to join the #1 and #3, Smart has completed its transition from a maker of frugal and fun-sized urban runarounds to a purveyor of premium electric SUVs, with a price bracket that spans from £32,000 to a mic-drop £50,000-plus at the top end. We’re not in Hambach any more, Toto.But in this era of Capri crossovers and luxury Lotuses, convention is clearly but a byword for stagnation, and Smart – under the joint stewardship of mother company Mercedes-Benz and Chinese step-parent Geely – is diversifying and expanding its line-up in a bid to carve itself a larger (and vastly more profitable) slice of the pie. This is a company simply adapting its line-up to cater to prevailing market trends, and if that’s not ‘smart’, then what is?The Aesthetic Appeal of Negative Camber: More Than Just Performance

Reviving the Estate: The Stylish Evolution of the Audi A6 Avant
New platform, new hardware and new looks for next generation of combustion-engined big estate car The future of estate cars may be in doubt at Volvo, but they still have a firm place in the range of that other known purveyor of them. The Avant is an institution at Audi, to the extent that it’s launching its latest Audi A6 as an estate first, with the saloon to follow later on.Globally, just over half of A6s are specified as a saloon, but in Europe, the estate dominates. Even so, its role has changed over the past five decades of A6 and 100 production.Today, buyers after a large, practical family car are more likely to pick an SUV, such as the Q5 or Q7. That leaves the A6 free to become more of a lifestyle product, one that puts more emphasis on style and driving dynamics.Unleashing Power: The Silverado EV Trail Boss Set to Exceed 8,500 Pounds

UK Government Considers Raising Luxury Car Tax Threshold to Boost EV Adoption
All cars costing more than £40k are charged the Expensive Car Supplement, but the average EV costs around £50k
The UK government is considering raising the 'luxury car tax' threshold for electric cars in a bid to drive uptake.
Currently, the Expensive Car Supplement (ECS) applies to all cars – including EVs as of 1 April 2025 – priced above £40,000, adding £425 annually in additional vehicle excise duty (VED) from years two to six after purchase.
In conjunction with the standard annual VED rate of £195 (applicable to EVs from year two), that means £40,000-plus cars attract a tax bill of £3100 in the first six years.
With the average EV costing well over £40,000 (various sources put it at around £10,000 more than that), there has been criticism that the scheme is at odds with the government's zero-emission vehicle (ZEV) mandate, under which manufacturers must achieve a 28% EV sales mix this year, rising to 80% in 2030.
In April, EVs accounted for just 20.4% of new car registrations - behind even last year's ZEV mandate target of 22% – and they currently account for just 10.7% of private car sales, prompting calls for the government to incentivise retail car buyers to switch to EVs.
Stellantis UK boss Eurig Druce told Autocar: “We’d like to see a review of this new taxation, with a raised threshold, so that UK drivers have fewer barriers in order to make the switch to electric cars."
And Ford slammed the government's decision to impose VED on EVs at a time when it's also penalising manufacturers for not selling enough, saying: "Introducing VED for EVs from April risks slowing adoption at a crucial time for the industry."
Now, though, the government has given the first indication that it is considering an adjustment to the ECS scheme, which could result in dramatically reduced VED costs for a large number of EVs currently on sale in the UK.
Minister for the future of roads Lilian Greenwood wrote in a letter sent to a local MP and seen by Autocar that measures were being considered to make it easier for the mandated sales mixes to be achieved in the coming years.
"As announced at Autumn Budget 2024, the Government recognises the disproportionate impact of the current VED Expensive Car Supplement threshold for those purchasing zero emission cars from 1 April 2025," she wrote.
"We will consider raising the threshold for zero-emission cars only at a future fiscal event to make it easier to buy electric cars."
Greenwood offered no details of when that 'fiscal event' would be, but the Autumn Budget is expected to be announced in October.
Autocar has contacted the Department for Transport (DfT) for further comment.
EV sales surged in the run-up to 1 April 2025, when EVs became subject to the ECS, recording a massive 41.7% year-on-year uptick to claim a 25.3% market share.
The following month, despite manufacturers trimming the price of various electric models below £40,000 to swerve the ECS, EVs' market share dropped to 20.4%.
A wave of more affordable electric cars – from Stellantis, the Volkswagen Group and Renault, among others – are due to arrive on the market in the next two years, but EVs remain broadly significantly more expensive than ICE equivalents due to the much higher cost of batteries compared with engines.
The BMW i4 saloon, for example, starts at £51,280 in the UK, compared with £41,875 for the cheapest 3 Series saloon. The new Volkswagen ID 7 Tourer similarly starts at £51,795 while the same-sized Passat estate costs £39,840.
These disparities in price between equivalent EV and ICE models are cited as a significant inhibitor of EV uptake - particularly among retail buyers, as the benefit-in-kind (BIK) tax advantages for fleet buyers greatly reduce the premium.
The government recently tweaked the framework of the ZEV mandate, in consultation with manufacturers, to make the goals more achievable.
It confirmed that hybrid cars can remain on sale post-2030 and simplified the emissions credits trading scheme – but the ECS threshold wasn't among the changes.
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Unleashing the BMW M4 CS: The Perfect Blend of Power and Precision
Rather than cranking the dial up to 11 as the CSL did, this car aims for a perfect 10 BMW’s recent appetite for extra-special versions of its mainline M cars shows no sign of letting up, and the latest derivative to arrive in the UK is this: the wild-looking M4 CS.This is a model its maker says exists in the “broad space between racetrack experience and soul-stirring road performance”, and there’s certainly evidence to back up that sentiment. The car’s engine, cabin and use of composite materials closely resembles that of the hardcore, Porsche 911 GT3-baiting, rear-drive M4 CSL of 2022, yet here the highly adaptable four-wheel drive system of the regular M4 Competition is retained, as are the back seats that were sacrificed to save 21kg in the track-ready CSL.Garching’s form when it comes to cars like this can be variable, but when it nails the recipe, the results are generally world class, and very special indeed. The previous M4 CS was a success but a qualified one, its honed dynamics not entirely justifying an at times frustratingly spartan cabin. But since then we have also had the M5 CS – a five-star Autocar road test car and, depending on who you ask, perhaps the greatest super-saloon of all time.BMW has never offered cars such as the M4 CS cheaply, and a price the far side of £120,000 will certainly give even M diehards pause for thought, not least because it puts the car into the same airspace as the recent, and very fine, Porsche 911 Carrera GTS. But if this latest CS is as good as we know it could be, it might justify the outlay. Massive performance, handling exploitability and genuine usability in a single package is on the cards.European Shift: BYD Surges Ahead of Tesla as UAW Raises Job Concerns at Stellantis











