Citroen C1 2014-2022 review

Open gallery Close by Steve Cropley 19 June 2014 Follow @StvCr Share

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Like its partners Peugeot and Toyota, Citroen has been making hay for nine years with the Citroen C1 city car it manufactures in a co-operative factory in the Czech Republic, selling 760,000 examples of the previous model since 2005. 

There have been several facelifts, but now it’s time for an all-new body style to go with a set of updated mechanicals: the familiar 1.0-litre 67bhp Toyota-sourced triple is being joined in showrooms by a normally aspirated, 81bhp version of PSA’s 1.2-litre three-cylinder engine, which freshens the offer and gives the car a welcome turn of performance.

The C1’s compactness makes it agile on the road, with the same bias in corners towards stabilising understeer as the outgoing modelSteve CropleyEditor-in-chief

There are three and five-door versions of the new-style model, as before, but Citroen this time adds a fabric-topped variant called Airscape whose full-length canopy rolls back at the touch of a switch.

Top-end models have niceties like a 7.0in touchscreen that allows control of most non-driving functions, plus climate control air conditioning. There are five trim levels, Touch, Feel, Furio, Flair and Flair Edition in order of rising luxury, with only two available on the semi-convertible versions.

The entry-level models get 14in steel wheels, hill start assist, daytime running lights, front electric windows, and an audio system with USB connectivity, while upgrading to the Feel trim comes with 15in steel wheels, air conditioning and a 7.0in touchscreen infotainment complete with Bluetooth and DAB radio.

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The mid-range Furio trim gives the C1 sporty additions including a rear diffuser, 15in black alloy wheels and dedicated graphics. The top-of-the-range Flair and Flair Edition models get electrically adjustable and heated mirrors, a reversing camera and a hint of chrome, while the latter gains a two-tone paint job, keyless entry, climate control and automatic lights.

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The Airscape models only come in Feel and Flair trims. Prices start at £9125 for the 1.0-litre three-door Touch, and rise to £13,480. An extra-value launch model called the C1 Airscape Feel is priced at £12,190.

The C1’s chassis is closely related to that of the outgoing car, but there are important suspension changes such as a twist-beam rear axle assembly, now 4kg lighter than the previous car’s. Springs and dampers are re-rated, and there’s a bigger diameter anti-roll bar.

It also gets hill-hold assist and new, low rolling resistance tyres on either 14 or 15in wheels. It continues to have excellent fuel consumption: the smaller engine is good for 74.3mpg combined, with a CO2 output of just 88g/km and the newer, bigger engine delivers 65.7mpg combined, while emitting 99g/km.

Citroen C1 2014-2022 news

Thieves stripping parked cars amid parts shortage Thieves stripping parked cars amid parts shortage Citroen ends C1 city car production after 17 years Citroen ends C1 city car production after 17 years Environmental rules make Citroen C1 “nearly impossible” to replace Environmental rules make Citroen C1 "nearly impossible" to replace Revised 2021 Citroen C1 line-up brings new Urban Ride variant Revised 2021 Citroen C1 line-up brings new Urban Ride variant

The C1’s compactness makes it agile on the road, with the same bias in corners towards stabilising understeer as the outgoing model. The more powerful, more torquey engine is very flexible and has a new turn of speed, the effects of the suspension revisions are easily detected and the car maintains its poise pretty well on lumpy roads, and pitches less than the outgoing car. It’s a very safe if slightly stodgy handler, whose body rolls more than rivals in corners.

Noise control isn’t the C1’s greatest strength. The Airscape roof allows much racket in, and the car isn’t very good at coping with noisy surfaces either.

And while we’re at it, the powertrain lacks refinement at low speed, vibrating while it waits at lights (the stop/start system in our test car was erratic in operation) and suffering from low-speed shunt plus faint but annoying flat-spots in its power delivery right through the range. A Volkswagen Up and its Skoda and Seat variants, or a Hyundai i10 does it better.

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