Friday, August 15, 2025

2026 Nissan Leaf review: Quick drive

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How do you grab attention for a new small electric vehicle (EV) in a sea of similar cars hitting the market from Asian manufacturers? Easy: you slap it with a badge that links it to the world’s first mass-produced EV, the Nissan Leaf hatch.

At first glance, that’s about all the new SUV-shaped Leaf shares with the first two generations of the nameplate. But despite the body style reinvention, the new Leaf was developed with efficiency to the fore.

Hence Nissan’s obsession with aerodynamics and the new look. It’s a design full of interesting detail and more than a hint of the Nissan Z sports coupe when viewed from the back.

The headline figure is a range of up to 600km on a single charge, but can Nissan keep the price sensible?

We won’t know that answer until closer to the Leaf’s arrival in Australia in 2026, but we did get a chance to drive a pre-production prototype version of the car to its limits at a special World Car of the Year jurors’ day in France.

How much does the Nissan Leaf cost?

We’ll have to take a bit of a guess at this one, as Nissan hasn’t announced pricing for the Leaf in any market yet.