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No plans for new Citroen C1 following cut-price C3

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For now, Citroën is concentrating on the Ami and recently revealed new C3

A small price difference between the A- and B-segments is enough to cancel less practical C1’s return

Citroën won’t develop a city car positioned between the Ami and the new ë-C3 (ie a new C1), CEO Thierry Koskas has confirmed.

Koskas told Autocar that the low launch price €23,300 (£20,100)  of the new electric C3 leaves little space in the French brand’s line-up for a city car.

He elaborated: “The A-segment is very, very small in Europe – maybe because there are not very many offerings. This is a very small segment. Why? Because at the end of the day, the price difference between the A- and B-segments was not so big. With a B-segment car, you had the benefit of a much more versatile car, [with more] cargo space [and seating for] five people. The benefit of the extra €1000 you paid was quite high.

“So for the time being, [the A-segment] isn’t a priority. But we’ll see what happens in the future. For the time being, we start with [the] Ami and then we go to [the new] C3.”

For reference, pricing for the petrol-engined C1 started at £12,945 when it was axed in January 2022. In response to its cancellation, Citroën introduced the You trim level for the C3, at £12,995. It now costs £13,995.

Citroën’s commitment to affordability will manifest a €19,990 (£17,250) version of the new electric C3 with a range of 124 miles in mid-2025, said Koskas.

A spokesperson for the brand confirmed to Autocar that a combustion-engined variant is also in development, and that it is planned to arrive in the UK priced below £15,000 – in line with the big-selling Dacia Sandero (£13,795).

Although there are no plans for a new city car, Koskas did confirm that the lower-cost Smart Car platform, which will make its European debut on the new C3, would underpin other Citroëns in the future.

“This is a platform that will receive different vehicles, because it’s a very promising platform where we can do a lot of things, and not only B-hatch cars,” he said.

He identified four “very clear” key values for every upcoming Citroën: “Comfort, simplicity, sustainability and daring.”

“What we need to do is to align the product line-up that we have with the positioning of a popular brand, to keep mobility accessible to everyone,” he explained.

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