Citroen C3 2025 review | A comfortable and affordable supermini

4.0

Expert review

Pros

  • Cool styling inside and out

  • Comfy ride

  • Relatively affordable

Cons

  • Entry-level engine not great on pace or refinement

  • Some ergonomic frustrations

  • Bare-minimum warranty arrangement

4/5Overall score
Practicality
Driving
Tech and equipment
Running costs
Citroen C3 front

The CarGurus verdict

As a budget small car, the Citroen C3 is a really appealing option. It has a stylish and cheery feel inside and out, and it has a surprising amount of interior space given its compact footprint. The comfortable ride makes daily life easy, and running costs should be low, while you also get a decent amount of standard equipment given the low price.

You’ll have to accept the fact that performance and refinement will be limited, and that there are some ergonomic irritations courtesy of the square steering wheel (??!!) and the half-baked infotainment system. These foibles are worth putting up with for the low price, though, and otherwise, the C3 is a generally likeable and capable car.

Search for a Citroen C3 on CarGurus

What is the Citroen C3?

For several years and multiple generations, the Citroen C3 has represented the entry point into the French firm’s range as its smallest and most affordable model. The latest iteration of the car, originally introduced in 2024, is a little different to those that have gone before, because it trades its hatchback design for a slightly raised-up SUV-like stance, as is very much the fashion these days. But despite its extra heft, the C3 still has a starting price that makes it one of the most affordable new cars in the UK.

Granted, to attain the lowest starting price, you have to put up with relatively modest equipment levels and a petrol engine that’s noisy and not awfully powerful, but both are more than tolerable given the low price. Citroen also offers a higher-spec version with more luxury trappings, and a pokier and more refined hybrid powertrain, for those prepared to spend a little more.

Rivals? Well, you have to consider the Dacia Sandero, and the more SUV-like Sandero Stepway, as competitors, and these are cheaper still, although arguably more compromised at the same time. The MG3 is also a small car that’s cheaper, and available with both a petrol engine and a hybrid powertrain. There are also several other models from the gigantic Stellantis stable, of which Citroen is a part, that use exactly the same platform and mechanicals as the C3: these models include the Fiat Grande Panda, the Vauxhall Frontera, and the (slightly bigger) Citroen C3 Aircross.

Like all these sister cars, the C3 is also available as an all-electric car. However, we’ve written a separate review for the EV version because its ownership proposition and competitor set are rather different. This review, then, concentrates solely on the petrol-engined versions.

  • Standard safety kit provided in the Citroen C3 includes six airbags, automatic emergency braking, lane departure warning, speed limit recognition and warning, driver attention warning, and Citroen emergency call.
  • Both the lane departure warning and the speed limit recognition and warning can be turned off if you find them too annoying, and there are even physical buttons placed down to the right of the steering wheel that allow you to do so quickly and easily, so you don’t have to fiddle around with touchscreen menus. We couldn’t find a way of switching off the driver attention warning, but unlike similar systems in some cars, it’s not too overbearing in the way it works.
  • The Citroen C3 hasn’t yet been pummelled into large concrete objects by the bods at Euro NCAP, and neither have any of the myriad relatives from other Stellantis brands that share its architecture. We will update this review once there’s anything further to report on that front.

  • If you want the cheapest one: The entry-level Plus version with the 98bhp engine and the manual gearbox is a little slow and rather unrefined, but it’s fine given its low pricetag.
  • If you want all the toys: The Max version of the C3 has several bits of very desirable extra kit over the Plus version. Pair this trim with the hybrid powertrain, and you get a few more bits on top (electric parking brake, front fog lights, heated steering wheel, and heated windscreen).
  • If you want the most efficient one: The hybrid has an advantage of a good few mpg over the non-hybrid C3 according to WLTP figures, and if anything, we can see that advantage being even bigger in the real world because the hybrid powertrain is so much more relaxed in its operation.
  • If you do regular motorway journeys: You definitely want the hybrid because its a lot more settled and relaxed at the national limit than the other powertrain.
Ivan Aistrop
Published 19 Mar 2025 by Ivan Aistrop
Ivan Aistrop is a Contributing Editor at CarGurus UK. Ivan has been at the sharp end of UK motoring journalism since 2004, working mostly for What Car?, Auto Trader and CarGurus, as well as contributing reviews and features for titles including Auto Express and Drivetribe.
CarGurus Editorial Team
Updated 9 Jan 2026 by CarGurus Editorial Team
While we highlight specific author bylines where possible, sometimes our content results from the combined efforts of several members of the CarGurus editorial team. As with all our editorial content, you can expect high levels of automotive insight and expertise delivered in a style that is approachable and free from jargon.

Main rivals

Body styles

  • Five-door hatchback