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Citroen built its reputation on novel engineering and striking design. It seemed to lose that reputation for a while but the Citroen C4 Cactus launched in 2014 went some way to reversing the trend, with quirky styling inside and out, and thoughtful details like hard-wearing ‘Airbumps’ down the doors and at the car’s corners to shrug off car park knocks.
The model was revised in 2018 and lost some of the original’s offbeat appeal, but it was ultimately a slightly better car. Today it’s a frugal and practical used car that still stands out from the crowd, and shouldn’t cost much to buy or run.
The Cactus straddles the supermini and small family car classes (think VW Polo and Golf) in size, and also blurs the lines between conventional hatchbacks and taller crossovers in its design, so rivals are numerous - you could consider anything from a Nissan Juke to a VW Golf as a potential alternative.
The original C4 Cactus was the kind of car you might have bought purely for the way it looked - a car that made a sensible family car purchase feel more like a special occasion. It was available in bright colours, the interior was styled to look like high-end luggage, and the sides of the car were adorned with air-filled plastic panels called Airbumps that looked like a chocolate bar and helped shrug off minor parking knocks and errant trolleys at the supermarket.
In 2018 Citroen toned down the Cactus’s styling and bumped up the car’s price a little reflecting a slightly more upmarket approach. While the car did lose some visual character, the fitment of Citroen’s ‘progressive hydraulic cushion’ suspension, ‘advanced comfort’ seats, and other tweaks behind the scenes made it a better car, if not a more interesting one.
In size the Cactus straddles the VW Polo and Golf classes, so feels spacious by supermini standards but a little small both in the cabin and boot compared to a regular family hatchback. The design is novel, with a low-mounted dashboard with a large glovebox on top (the passenger airbag actually deploys from the roof, freeing up space in the dash), and a pair of screens that predated most electric cars doing the same. It’s a pleasant place to be, though parents, and kids, may not appreciate that the rear windows only pop out, rather than whizz down electrically.
Post-2018 Cacti ride better than earlier models though both generations tend towards a softer, more relaxed experience, so this isn’t a car for sportier drivers. It’s at its best driven smoothly and gently, and the engines play into this - they have decent performance (and very good economy) but you won’t feel the need to red-line them - not least as the Cactus doesn’t have a rev counter.
Conventional crossovers like the Renault Captur, Peugeot 2008 and SEAT Arona are better all-rounders than the Citroen and a regular family hatch like the Volkswagen Golf or Vauxhall Astra drives better, but the Cactus is competent enough that we could fully understand anyone buying one simply because they liked the look.
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Given we’re focusing on the post-2018 models here, our preference would be for one of the petrol versions. They’re not quite as frugal as the diesels but it’s a bubblier and more enthusiastic engine to use, while still offering good economy and thanks to the car’s relatively light weight, more than enough performance too. With just a single trim level offered before the car went off sale, that keeps things simple too.
If you’ll excuse us a moment of irrational enthusiasm though, we’re much more fond of the original C4 Cactus design offered between 2014 and 2018. It wasn’t quite as well-rounded a product as the later cars (and being older, used examples will naturally be higher-mileage and probably a little more tired), but with those door-mounted ‘Airbumps’ and some vivid colour schemes, it scores higher than its successor for pure visual joy.
Nothing says pragmatism like having just a single trim level, but that’s what you got on the second generation C4 Cactus. We’re not sure why Citroen bothered naming it, frankly, but it makes our job in this section easy anyway, and if you see any other trim levels, then you’re probably looking at the earlier Cactus with its distinctive ‘Airbumps’ down the doors.
The Citroen C4 Cactus’s dimensions are:
The Citroen C4 Cactus’s boot size is:
Relatively low pricing means no Cactus attracts the government’s VED or ‘road tax’ surcharge for expensive vehicles, so all post-2018 Cactus models will cost you the same flat rate, currently £180 per year for petrol and diesel vehicles. Before April 2017 - so earlier pre-update Cacti - will be taxed on their CO2 emissions, which is even better news, since their official economy figures were so good (and therefore their CO2 emissions so low) that most are either free or cost only £20 to tax.
Some naturally-aspirated 1.2-litre pre-update petrol models can be found in only group 9 (out of 50) for insurance, while post-2018 cars start in group 11. Diesels begin in group 14, while the 1.2 Puretech 110 starts in group 16. No Cactus should be too expensive to insure as a result, with these numbers on par with most superminis and small family cars.
Read our full Citroen C4 Cactus review
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39037
How many Citroen C4 Cactus cars are available for sale?
54