Home » Stop Everything, The Renault Twingo Is Coming Back As A Cheap EV

Stop Everything, The Renault Twingo Is Coming Back As A Cheap EV

Renault Twingo Ev
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How’s this for a daily dose of cuteness? The internet’s favorite French economy car, the Renault Twingo, is once again coming back from the dead and this time it should pay heavy tribute to the original. Renault claims the next Twingo will be all-electric, start at less than €20,000, and go on sale in 2026. Even with a nearly three-year timeline, the automaker has already released a concept version and it’s absolutely adorable.

Sure, in profile, this city car may look more like a second-generation Twingo than anything, but details of the original abound. That smiley face, the three hood vents, its translucent-era Parisian chic.

Vidframe Min Top
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Look, we all complain that cars are getting too big, but how okay are you with dying in a small overlap crash anyway? Besides, the Twingo concept has good reason to offer a decent footprint: It could be one of Europe’s cheapest electric cars.

Renault Twingo 2x

 

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That targeted sub-€20,000 price tag I mentioned in the intro? It’s notable for several reasons. Firstly, that’s the plan before incentives. If government gravy trains keep it up, the next Twingo could be a properly cheap car. Oh, and in Europe, value-added tax is included in new car pricing. With the Euro roughly nine cents ahead of the dollar at the time of writing, the next Twingo could be the blueprint for EV domination. After all, automakers can hype up pricey electric crossovers all they want, but they won’t see exponential sales growth if people can’t afford them.

Dacia Spring

Believe it or not, Renault already has experience building a popular, affordable electric car. See, Renault owns Dacia, and Dacia sells something called the Spring. It has a top speed of yes, a zero-to-60 mph time of eventually, and most importantly, a dirt cheap MSRP. We’re talking about €20,800 for an electric car with 140 miles of WLTP range, good enough for runabout use. If the next Twingo is cheaper and better, that would be one hell of an achievement.

Renault Twingo 3

 

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The, um, third rebirth of the Renault Twingo is both exciting and mildly shocking. Is this what it takes for millennials to understand how baby boomers felt when the New Beetle was unveiled? Regardless, we’ll never say no to yet another adorable European hatchback, and will be watching closely in 2026 to see if Renault sticks to its pricing estimates. Anyone want to place a bet?

(Photo credits: Renault, Dacia)

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JDE
JDE
1 year ago

I think in the US with it’s past experiences with Renault overall, this might be a hard sell with this name on it. I know the Maverick has raised it’s prices, but if the price delta stays close here, a 40MPG trucklet, with decent room for 4 and a small bed is likely to still be more adored for 20k ish

Carlos Ferreira
Carlos Ferreira
1 year ago
Reply to  JDE

It’s coming back but not the US.

ScottyB
ScottyB
1 year ago

I’m not sure about the horse shoe LEDs but I like it, a lot. And that green, wow.

Brunsworks
Brunsworks
1 year ago

I wish I could get one of these in the U.S.

Anders
Anders
1 year ago

The semantic nerd in me have a hard time with the door handle design (maybe I should seek treatment for this…) While this concept, as the original Twingo, use a similar overarching circular motif for the door handles, the original Twingo door handles are designed in a very understandable and semantic fashion. One half of the circle is the indent where you access the actual door handle, while the other half is slightly domed so to create the impression of space and communicate where you put your hand. On the concept they have highlighted the circular element by putting an illuminated(?) ring around it, and applying a separate color/material in the circle. By doing so the communication of function becomes more confused. Is this door handles for both front and rear door? (would be really nice with suicide rear doors), or is the whole circle the door handle?
Like the whole car, this detail feels unnecessary over-designed, like the designers tried to cram in as many heritage elements as possible on this small car.

Matti Sillanpää
Matti Sillanpää
1 year ago

Awesome. This sort of small citycar is the optimum usecase for EV (and I’ve got Enyaq and not too happy about it). It’s also weird that none of the european big players have hit this market spot since VW sold out the eUP! and it’s derivates.

Jakob K's Garage
Jakob K's Garage
1 year ago

The Twingo Mk1 wasn’t about looking cool, sporty and muscular and Chrysler 300C’y with small windows, high hips and big wheels, it really was quite the opposite, sort of an anti-car so to speak. Roomy, happy, flexible, relaxed: That was the Twingo.

But I get it that you’ll want a car to look cool, if you design a car nowadays, like we’ve seen in Adrian’s drawing lessons. So it has some round “fun” eye markings, but really none of that original Twingo soul. Back to the drawing board!

Not that I am a Twingo expert, but I did own one and love it

Double Wide Harvey Park
Double Wide Harvey Park
1 year ago

> It has a top speed of yes

Well done

changedmynameasIworkinadealershipandsomeofourbrandsarentgreat
changedmynameasIworkinadealershipandsomeofourbrandsarentgreat
1 year ago

Lets drop those rear doors whilst we are at it and save some costs

Ppnw
Ppnw
1 year ago

I don’t love it… it looks more like a bad resto-mod than anything. It’s not just “inspired” by the original, it just is the original.

You can do retro without churning out a photocopy. Renault did it themselves with the electric 5 concept.

And I love the original – so many family members had it at the time. It was just so French. This is lazy.

Double Wide Harvey Park
Double Wide Harvey Park
1 year ago
Reply to  Ppnw

> It was just so French. This is lazy.

So, it’s just as French as the OG then?

Ppnw
Ppnw
1 year ago

Hilarious.

Silent But Deadly
Silent But Deadly
1 year ago

It’ll take Renault longer than three years to convince markets outside Europe that a car this size is actually something you might want to own. More likely…and sensibly…it won’t even try. Which is a poor reflection on the rest of us…

Ford_Timelord
Ford_Timelord
1 year ago

actually the rest of the world outside of the USA, middle east and Australia tend to do small cars pretty well. What do you think they drive in India, South East Asia and cities around the world? it’s not F100s

Silent But Deadly
Silent But Deadly
1 year ago
Reply to  Ford_Timelord

No shit. Renault (or, at least, the Alliance) has those markets covered already. A reborn Twingo is unlikely to travel there either…

Ford_Timelord
Ford_Timelord
1 year ago

Sorry, I completely read your post in the wrong tone and started commenting after only the first sentence! you are completely correct.

changedmynameasIworkinadealershipandsomeofourbrandsarentgreat
changedmynameasIworkinadealershipandsomeofourbrandsarentgreat
1 year ago
Reply to  Ford_Timelord

Oi Australian here. We do small cars fine. One of the bests selling cars here is the KIA Picanto? Why? It’s cheap and available. Build it and they will come. We were hoovering up all the hot Clios Renault could send us as well. Did we build them? No, because we are a RHD country and are limited therefore on who we could sell to not just because of tiny margins.

Ford_Timelord
Ford_Timelord
1 year ago

This is true. I read the post in the wrong tone. I’m in Australia and get more excited about an abarth than I do a RAM we do however have a lot of large cars still.

Mr Sarcastic
Mr Sarcastic
1 year ago

I bet if you polled every car buyer in the world and asked them their top 5 requirements in buying their next car Adorable would not show its face.

D-dub
D-dub
1 year ago
Reply to  Mr Sarcastic

Half of the Subarus sold in the US are because they put puppies in their commercials. Cute sells.

Mr Sarcastic
Mr Sarcastic
1 year ago
Reply to  D-dub

I agree marketing sells so puppy ads will help all cars. Who among buyers says I want adorable? Most adorable cars have been failures.

Manuel Verissimo
Manuel Verissimo
1 year ago
Reply to  Mr Sarcastic

Sure. The first gen Twingo was a failure and I never ever see a Fiat 500 on the streets 😉

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
1 year ago
Reply to  Mr Sarcastic

“Angry asshole” OTOH…

Last edited 1 year ago by Cheap Bastard
Double Wide Harvey Park
Double Wide Harvey Park
1 year ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

You spelled “dodge” wrong

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
1 year ago

That’s because I was thinking “Jeep”.

Saul Springmind
Saul Springmind
1 year ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

The alternate spelling “ram” works fine too.

Maymar
Maymar
1 year ago
Reply to  Mr Sarcastic

Adorable as a priority? No, but styling in general? And on smaller cars, appealing styling tends to skew adorable.

Carlos Ferreira
Carlos Ferreira
1 year ago

I have fond memories of putting over 3k Miles on a Mk 1, in quintessential desaturated mint green, driving all round Portugal and Spain with a mate many moons ago. It had a cloud pattern on the seats, and the rears were adjustable on tracks and even reclined! Managed to literally pick up two attractive young German lady hitchhikers, one of whom ended up being my long distance GF. That little car was brimming with character, even with the base 1.2L engine.

Mr Sarcastic
Mr Sarcastic
1 year ago

What is a long distance girlfriend? Is that like a penpal? And character is that like a blind date who has a great personality? What is a 1.2L motor, is that like the smallest condom? Just asking?

Adrian Clarke
Adrian Clarke
1 year ago
Reply to  Mr Sarcastic

Try having a girlfriend in San Jose. THAT got expensive my grumpy friend.

Mr Sarcastic
Mr Sarcastic
1 year ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

You had me at try having a girlfriend. Before switching to imaginary girlfriends I have had girlfriends who lived close and far. Not sure if the weekly dates with regular presents for carnal delights was cheaper than long distance phone calls, I am old enough to remember long distance, and travel costs for occasional carnal delights which cost more? Do you count overall costs or kp$?

Adrian Clarke
Adrian Clarke
1 year ago
Reply to  Mr Sarcastic

Before I married my American wife, I had to get one of those long distance calling cards. No messenger or internet calls in those days. I used to know the British Airways flight numbers and schedule from Heathrow to North Carolina like the back of my hand.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
1 year ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

Well its not colloquially known as Man Jose for nothing…

Carlos Ferreira
Carlos Ferreira
1 year ago
Reply to  Mr Sarcastic

A long distance girlfriend is like a regular girlfriend except much more expensive and with much fewer benefits. It sounds cool to brag that you have one in some far off place though, at least in my mind and in my group of easily impressed friends.

Character is what actually makes cars worth owning and people worth knowing, although it’s often used as an excuse for being intolerable, in both cases.

Also, the Twingo was fueled by controlled explosions, so it had an engine, not a motor. Ahem…

Mr Sarcastic
Mr Sarcastic
1 year ago

I am not sure. Regular presents dates, meals smaller amounts but more often. And by what measurements are we using? Total cost or cost per knookie?

El Chubbacabra
El Chubbacabra
1 year ago
Reply to  Mr Sarcastic

Metric system, I guess.

OrigamiSensei
OrigamiSensei
1 year ago

Shut up and take my money! I absolutely adored the 1st gen Twingo.

The actual execution remains to be seen, but if it’s a practical and affordable car and it came to the US I would want it so hard.

TOSSABL
TOSSABL
1 year ago

Covet!
Wait (remembering New Beetle, neon, Dart,….). Nevermind; I’ve learned not to hold my breath

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 year ago

Is it pronounced TWIN-GO or TWING-O? And I take it this is another Euro-only model, so not legal in the US until 2051. We’ll all have flying cars by then, surely.

Óscar Morales Vivó
Óscar Morales Vivó
1 year ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

I’ve only heard it pronounced TWIN-GO

Mr Sarcastic
Mr Sarcastic
1 year ago

I read Twing-Go

Double Wide Harvey Park
Double Wide Harvey Park
1 year ago
Reply to  Mr Sarcastic

That is the correct answer.

Double Wide Harvey Park
Double Wide Harvey Park
1 year ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

The French say tweeng-go.

Last edited 1 year ago by Double Wide Harvey Park
Sbzr
Sbzr
1 year ago

the e-Kwid is already barebones utilitarian, it would be perfectly fine if they could just push range a little more, curious but realistically it might be just a “cheaper” EV for EU standards, which means still expensive

Mr Sarcastic
Mr Sarcastic
1 year ago
Reply to  Sbzr

What is 20,000 pounds?

Goof
Goof
1 year ago
Reply to  Mr Sarcastic

Looking at UK prices…

A Toyota Aygo X starts at £16,100, which is roughly the same size classA Renault Clio starts at £17,795, which is a size class aboveA Vauxhall Corsa starts at £19,275, which is a size class aboveThe whole Dacia lineup starts under £20,000. The Sandero is £13,795A Peugeot 208 starts at £20,400, which is a size class aboveA Volkswagen Polo starts at £20,730, which is the same size classA Toyota Yaris Hybrid starts at £22,125, which is a size class aboveA Honda Jazz starts at £26,395, which is a size class above
So while £20,000 might be ambitious for a new BEV before any subsidies, it’s still generally out-priced by a few thousand pounds, and you could purchase a (base trim, stripped) vehicle in a larger size class for the same money.

Note when I say larger size class, I’m mostly meaning Golf-sized.

BEVs are still pricier because the production volumes for batteries, motors, etc. are currently nowhere near that of ICE and typical hybrid vehicles (be a bit still), so the cost scaling can’t match and the price reflects that. I think £20,000 is a pretty good step towards where folks want things to be, and I would assume incentives could make it competitive, but given the UK’s past decade or so, I can also see the price being off-putting.

Last edited 1 year ago by Goof
Goof
Goof
1 year ago
Reply to  Goof

Looks like the Editor constantly eats bullets, so apologies for the formatting. It had bullets when I entered it originally, not sure why it won’t render them now!

Mr Sarcastic
Mr Sarcastic
1 year ago
Reply to  Goof

Sorry I was asking equivalent in dollars

Andrew Wyman
Andrew Wyman
1 year ago

The kept the smiles, which means the designers fully understood the assignment and nailed it. Plus it is a small, “reasonably” priced car.

Meanwhile, the new Forester, Escape and Equinox all look so similar that I find myself double checking the badging to make sure I have the right one.

Dar Khorse
Dar Khorse
1 year ago

I literally screamed with joy when I saw this headline.
Too bad we’ll never see it in the US. That just might be the deciding factor in my decision about whether or not to relocate to Europe, though…

Goof
Goof
1 year ago

I have a friend in Denmark that has a 2nd Gen Renaulsport Twingo.

Still jealous.

Slow Joe Crow
Slow Joe Crow
1 year ago

Good small EVs are far more useful to the world than another 1000hp luxury missile

10001010
10001010
1 year ago

I would happily pay a $10,000 premium for a top of the line performance model of this.

MrLM002
MrLM002
1 year ago

If the seats don’t fold flat like the original I don’t want it. Even if I wanted it I doubt they’d ever bring it to the US though :'(

Maymar
Maymar
1 year ago
Reply to  MrLM002

If there’s no fabric sunroof, I expect a riot with many things lit on fire, or as it’s known in France, Mardi.

Double Wide Harvey Park
Double Wide Harvey Park
1 year ago
Reply to  Maymar

Lol

Nic Periton
Nic Periton
1 year ago

I was driving a Dacia Spring this morning! It was a car.

PlatinumZJ
PlatinumZJ
1 year ago

That face!!! ^_^

Chartreuse Bison
Chartreuse Bison
1 year ago

“Is this what it will really look like?”
*scrolls down to see wheels*
Ah, unrealistic bullshit. Wake me with a real pic

Goof
Goof
1 year ago

Moreover, what if they just continue what they’ve done with the Renault Zoe/Nissan Leaf and it’s another cut rate battery with no proper conditioning or thermal management? That’d be one way to reach that price target.

I agree, concept cars of super minis are always pipe dreams.

Last edited 1 year ago by Goof
Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
1 year ago
Reply to  Goof

Who needs thermal management in Lisbon, Madrid or Marseille?
But yeah – low profile wheels have no place on an affordable mini-EV.

Goof
Goof
1 year ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

Easy, heat can be just as problematic as cold temps. The issues folks have with Leafs are not isolated to people in North Dakota. Plenty of California, Texas, and Florida Leafs have the same issues. At least there’s been growing aftermarket and scrapyard support for dealing with things at a reasonable price, but it’s well known that the Leaf and Zoe tend to trash their batteries.

Mr Sarcastic
Mr Sarcastic
1 year ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

Cheaper than building different models for every market

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