MG3 Hybrid Review 2025 | Small hybrid for a low price

Pros

  • Hybrid powertrain impresses for both performance and economy

  • Affordable to buy and well equipped

  • Pleasant to drive

Cons

  • Small boot and limited versatility

  • Some brittle interior plastics

  • Safety systems can get irritating

4/5Overall score
Practicality
Driving
Tech and equipment
Running costs
MG3 Hybrid front 3

The CarGurus verdict

The MG3 Hybrid+ is a very decent little car that does a lot of things rather well, but that’s let down a touch by a few annoying details. On the plus side, it has smart styling, it’s temptingly affordable to buy, it’s very well equipped, it’s reasonably spacious for passengers, it’s pleasant to drive, and the hybrid powertrain does well for performance, refinement and economy.

Gripes include a small loadspace that’s not awfully versatile, some iffy interior plastics, some residual infotainment niggles, and some over-nannying safety systems. But, by and large, these aren’t significant enough to take the shine off the MG3 Hybrid+ overall. If you’re looking for your next supermini, and you fancy an affordable hybrid, then certainly give it a look.

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What is the MG3 Hybrid+?

The MG3 Hybrid+ could quite possibly be the next chapter in the success story that is MG’s resurgence. It’s fairly common knowledge that the company went to the wall in 2005, and was immediately snapped up by Chinese owners and spent the next few years being a dedicated purveyor of cheap-and-cheerful hatchbacks and saloons.

In recent years, however, the firm’s products have become more and more compelling, with a range of electric cars, plug-in hybrids and SUVs that buyers have found very tempting due to their low pricing and high-value return. This resurgence has now reached such a point that MG is regularly battling to break into the top 10 brands for UK car sales, and considering where the firm has come from, that’s mightily impressive.

The MG3 Hybrid+ is a good illustration of how that's happened. This smartly styled little supermini hatchback is one of the most affordable hybrid cars that the new car market has to offer, and that immediately gives it an attractive USP. It’s also extremely generously equipped despite its low price, and its hybrid powertrain promises to deliver exceptionally low running costs. In other words, the new MG is playing to all the same strengths that have made MG’s other recent models so compelling. However, is the all-round package compelling enough to compete in the fiercely competitive supermini sector? Find out in our MG3 Hybrid+ car review.

For clarity, since the MG3 Hybrid+ was first released, MG has released a non-hybrid petrol version of the same car that's not as economical, but is quite a bit cheaper to buy. That version stands to be quite a different prospect to the hybrid, though, so we'll write a separate review of that car once we've driven it.

  • As well as the safety gear you expect such as six airbags and electronic stability control, all MG3 Hybrids come with a suite of driver assistance tech called MG Pilot. This includes automatic emergency braking with pedestrian and cyclist protection, lane keep assist, lane departure warning, adaptive cruise control with traffic jam assist, intelligent speed limit assist, and driver attention alert. Trophy trim adds even more functionality including blind spot assistance and rear cross traffic alert.
  • Now, this all sounds tremendous in theory, but the reality can be rather less appealing. Like many cars with such systems, your driving experience is accompanied by a constant cacophony of various bongs and beeps, alerting you to things that simply aren’t a problem. If the car thinks you’re getting too close to a white line on the road (you don’t actually have to get very close at all!), it bongs at you. The very nanosecond your velocity strays a single mile-per-hour over the speed limit, it bongs at you. It starts to feel like you’ll get bonged at if you so much as breathe in and out. You can turn these systems off if you so wish, but this takes quite a bit of faffing around with the touchscreen. And, the systems are automatically reinstated every time the car is turned off and restarted, so if you want to turn them off, you have to turn them off every single time you drive the car.
  • There’s one bong, however, that puts all the MG3’s myriad other bongs into the shade, and that’s the bong for the speed camera warning function. On approaching a camera, you’re notified of its existence by piercingly loud beeps that are separated by approximately a second, and this starts approximately 40 seconds (we counted) before the camera even comes into view, which is a bizarrely long time. There’s barely any visual indication about what the beep is about, either, so the first few times it happens before you work it out for yourself (it took us a while), you wonder what the Dickens is going on. It actually sounds like some sort of extremely loud countdown, and so it starts to feel a bit like you’re driving along in a random Hollywood movie, waiting for the counter to get to zero before some manner of nuclear device goes off. Which can be quite unnerving on the school run. Mercifully, this can be disabled (although again, it means several minutes of faffing with the touchscreen), and even more mercifully, when you turn this function off, it stays off.

  • If you want a properly affordable hybrid supermini: The MG 3 Hybrid+ is a really compelling choice. It’s good-looking, well-equipped and nice to drive, plus does a great job on performance and economy. The SE will do for most, but we could understand if you wanted to upgrade to the Trophy for the extra goodies.
  • If you want something more mainstream: The excellent Renault Clio can also be had for similar money, and it’s fabulous to drive, practical and decently equipped. However, the money merely gets you a petrol-powered version. A hybrid is offered in the form of the Clio E-Tech, but it’s considerably more expensive.
  • If you don’t know one hybrid from another: The Suzuki Swift can also be had for a reasonably similar sum to the MG, and Suzuki will tell anyone who listens that it’s ‘hybrid as standard’. However, it’s a mild hybrid rather than the full hybrid that the MG is, and that means the hybrid system amounts to little more than a posh starter motor, and so is nowhere near as sophisticated and nowhere near as economical. Indeed, there’s debate over whether mild hybrids are hybrids at all.
Ivan Aistrop
Published 20 Nov 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.
Ivan Aistrop
Updated 20 Nov 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.

Main rivals

Body styles

  • Five-door supermini hatchback