katero
Jul 01, 2026

The £11,990 Dacia Spring is the cheapest new EV in Britain

The Dacia Spring EV has been reduced by £4,000, stealing the crown as Britain's most affordable new EV from a Chinese rival.

Famed value-for-money Romanian car maker, owned by Renault, has dropped the price of its Spring electric city car to £11,990 on-the-road (OTR) - making it the cheapest new electric car on sale.

It previously cost £15,990, and the discount comes only a day after Chinese carmaker Leapmotor, majority owned by Stellantis, announced a reduction of its T03 city EV to £12,995.

In only 24 hours the title of Britain's cheapest new EV has changed, prompting speculation that we could be entering a cheap EV price war. 

The Spring's price drop hasn't seen the small, four-seater EV lose any of the essentials customers expect.

Each Spring still comes equipped with air conditioning, cruise control, rear parking sensors, a digital instrument display and Dacia's Media Control system with steering wheel-mounted controls.

Romanian carmaker Dacia has cut the price of its Spring EV by £4k to just £11,990, making it the cheapest new electric car on sale and undercutting the newly-reduced Leapmotor T03

Romanian carmaker Dacia has cut the price of its Spring EV by £4k to just £11,990, making it the cheapest new electric car on sale and undercutting the newly-reduced Leapmotor T03 

The Spring has a range of up to 140 miles and recharges from 20 to 80 per cent in 29 minutes, as well as a 308-litre boot which expands to 1,004 litres with the rear seats folded.

From now on the Dacia Spring will cost £11,990 for the Express Electric 70 trim and £12,990 for the Extreme Electric 100.

For £1,000 more, the Spring Extreme Electric 100 adds a more powerful 100hp motor, a 10.1-inch Media Nav Live with wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto (compared to the Expression's smartphone mount system), vehicle-to-load functionality, copper-accented styling, electric rear windows and a reversing camera.

The budget EV first launched in June 2024, with deliveries from October of that year.

In October 2025, it underwent a refresh with more powerful motors added and a new high-tech LFP battery, as well as retuned suspension and upgraded brakes.

In 2025, over 17,000 Springs were sold in Europe, securing second place in the European market for electric vehicles sold in the retail channel (segments A, B, B-SUV).

Pay £1k more for the Extreme trim and you get a 10.1-inch Media screen with Nav Live and wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto

Pay £1k more for the Extreme trim and you get a 10.1-inch Media screen with Nav Live and wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto 

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When it launched originally, it cost only £14,995, making it £12,000 less than the second cheapest EV at the time, the MG4 EV.

Then when the price increased to £15,990, the Spring became the second cheapest EV on sale behind the Chinese Leapmotor T03 which cost just £14,495 OTR once the Chinese carmaker's electric grant discount had been factored in.

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