Fiat has confirmed that it will launch a new hybrid 500 in 2026, securing a long-term future for its big-selling petrol-engined city car.
The new 500 Ibrida will arrive by early 2026, Fiat said in a statement, meaning it will arrive 18 years after the current petrol 500.
Production will move from Tychy in Poland to the Mirafiori plant in Italy that currently builds the electric Fiat 500e.
The 500 Ibrida will be powered by the same Firefly 1.0-litre mild-hybrid three-cylinder petrol engine as the existing 500 and the related Fiat Panda.
However, it's anticipated to switch from the current petrol 500's platform, which dates back to the 2003 Panda, onto the 500e's bespoke architecture.
The move to retrofit an EV with an internal combustion powertrain is unprecedented in the European car industry.
Several reports in March suggested that the bold measure was borne out of two key challenges.
First was the need to up production rates at Mirafiori amid slow sales of the 500e and its Abarth 500e hot hatch sibling. Fiat reduced shifts at the plant in February and reserved the option of completely pausing the production line if sales didn't pick up.
Second was the challenge of keeping the popular petrol 500 on sale, as the existing model falls foul of new cybersecurity standards introduced by the European Union.
Making it compliant with these would involve an expensive rehomologation effort.
Seventeen years on from launch, the petrol 500 remains a lynchpin for Fiat. Of the 173,187 new 500s sold across Europe last year (including Abarth models), 108,943 were petrol-engined.
The move to develop the 500 Ibrida also paves the way for a second generation of the Abarth 595 hot hatch, although Fiat's performance-focused sibling brand has yet to confirm any such plans.
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This is a great pity. It means the end of the cute Fiat 500, replaced by the overblown body of the electric version, in a desperate attempt to keep the Italian fascists happy.
Madness. This is a short-term knee-jerk. Research shows that most hybrid buyers go fully electric for their next vehicle. It's just a familiarity thing. The market will flip and all the hybrid buyers will wish they'd just gone fully electric.