Car of the Year Awards 2025: Best electric hot hatch
Hot hatches should make even the most mundane of drives feel magical. However, this ability to entertain shouldn't come at the expense of everyday usability...
Hyundai Ioniq 5 N
The sound, feel and sense of involvement you’ll find in a good petrol-powered hot hatch is hard to emulate in an electric car, but the Hyundai Ioniq 5 N comes closer to capturing all of that than any other so far.
For starters, it has a much sharper front end than rivals such as the Alpine A290 and Kia EV6 GT. Plus, it exhibits a more playful handling balance, with the car rotating gently when you lift off the accelerator midway through a corner.
The Ioniq 5 N also grips like hell (thanks to sticky Pirelli P-Zero tyres) and has taut body control, provided you have its adaptive suspension in the firmest setting. Indeed, it’s only when you start to really hustle the Ioniq 5 N down a bucking and heavily cambered country road that its 2.2-tonne kerb weight starts to reveal itself, with the suspension taking a moment to rein in big body movements.
The pièce de résistance is a ‘virtual’ eight-speed gearbox, complete with steering wheel- mounted shift paddles, that feels just like the real thing. The Mercedes-AMG A45 still has the edge for overall excitement and is actually slightly cheaper, but the N proves that electric cars can be properly engaging.
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