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Alfa Romeo MiTo

Small, stylish and surprisingly fast, the Alfa Romeo MiTo is a desirable supermini - but its firm ride and small cabin won't suit everyone

Alfa Romeo MiTo front cornering
  • Rating:
  • Latest deal price: from £11,911 to £17,547
  • For : Distinctive looks, wide range of engines, value for money
  • Against : Cramped cabin, firm suspension, noisy diesel versions

The Alfa Romeo MiTo is one of the most attractive superminis on the market, and its stylish interior and exterior design make it a classy alternative to the MINI hatch. Like the MINI, it comes with a wide variety of petrol and diesel engines, including high-performance and low emissions versions. But it's only available in one bodystyle and the three-door layout means it's not the most spacious car in its class.

Our pick: 1.4 TB MultiAir 135bhp Distinctive

Styling

Alfa Romeo has always made beautiful cars, and the MiTo is no exception. Taking its styling cues from the Alfa 8C Competizione supercar, its wide wheelarches and squat profile will definitely get you noticed, and it's just as distinctive as premium three-door rivals like the Audi A1 and MINI. While entry-level cars make do with steel wheels, top-spec versions come with 17-inch alloys and a rear spoiler as standard for an even sportier look.

Driving and Performance

There's a wide range of engines to choose from, in various different states of tune. The smooth 1.4-litre petrol has been tuned to three power outputs, 78bhp, 105bhp, or 135bhp – the latter is turbocharged, giving strong in-gear performance. Two diesels complete the line-up: a 1.6-litre unit with 120bhp and 320Nm of torque, which is noisy and unrefined, and a smaller 85bhp 1.3-litre that emits just 95g/km, making it tax exempt. Light steering means the MiTo is easy to manoeuvre around town, but doesn't inspire much confidence at higher speeds. Models with larger wheels suffer from a jittery, firm ride too.

MPG and running costs

One of its biggest strengths is its affordable running costs. The cleanest 1.3-litre diesel engine will return an amazing 78.5mpg combined, and at 95g/km is also road tax and Congestion Charge exempt. Yet even the powerful turbocharged petrol model should manage to return close to 50mpg, thanks to a stop and start system that cuts the engine in stopped traffic, and its cheaper to buy than diesel variants. However buyers should be aware that the 105bhp 1.4-litre has a higher emissions output than quicker models. A variety of service plans are available for the MiTo, and the generous standard kit list means that you're less likely to inflate the list price with costly options - often a problem for MINI owners.

Practicality

The Alfa Romeo MiTo's interior layout is simple and easy to use, and the fit and finish has improved over Alfa's of old. All versions are well equipped, with even base models getting air-con, a trip computer, electric windows and stop and start as standard. LIke the MINI, the MiTo is only offered as a three-door, and space inside is quite limited. The rear seats are cramped and quite difficult to clamber into, and there isn't much head or legroom. The 270-litre boot is adequate - it's certainly bigger than a MINI's – but the boot opening isn't very wide. 60/40 split folding rear seats - which are standard on most rivals - are an option that costs around £500.

Safety and reliability

In the benchmark Euro NCAP crash test, the MiTo scored an excellent five star rating. Standard safety equipment includes seven airbags, ESP traction control and ISOFIX child seating. Spend a little extra and you can add a tyre pressure monitoring system and bi-xenon headlamps. While the MiTo does seem better built than previous Alfas, the company still has a poor reputation for reliability, which is reflected by its poor showing in our annual Driver Power survey, where it ranked 25th.

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3 Comments

Very good car but...

I can't help feel Alfa could make it even better still e.g bringing out a long overdue 4-door version, redesigning the headlights, which have been widely criticized. The Mito could potentially be 4.5-5 star car!

By JTravolta77 on 20 September, 2011, 11:48pm

I HAVE to agree! I am thinking of replacing my 3door 147, and don't want a 5door car yet (aka Giulietta) so would like thi MiTo, but not with those lights!

By danielbez on 21 September, 2011, 7:46am

a few errors

The 105bhp is not turbo charged, hence the higher CO2 and the "variety of service plans" is in fact 5 years complimentary servicing, this car also won the Whatcar Readers award before Alfa are now level with VW and Toyota in the JD Power survey.

By Oli123 on 21 September, 2011, 1:34pm

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Pictures

Alfa Romeo MiTo front cornering
Alfa Romeo MiTo rear tracking
Alfa Romeo MiTo dash
Alfa Romeo MiTo detail
Alfa Romeo MiTo alloy wheel
Alfa Romeo MiTo badge
Alfa Romeo MiTo rear seats
Alfa Romeo MiTo boot

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