Currently reading: Skoda working on sub-£20,000 electric Fabia replacement
New EV will join four other electric Skoda models by 2030, boss Klaus Zellmer tells Autocar

Skoda is working on an entry-level electric model that will replace the Skoda Fabia, boss Klaus Zellmer has told Autocar.

This new car will also be priced similarly to the Fabia, Zellmer said, which currently retails in the UK at £17,800 in SE Comfort hatch guise.

Speaking at the launch of the Vision 7S concept car, which will itself hit showrooms in 2026, the Skoda boss said: “The Fabia with its price position will be succeeded by a battery-electric vehicle and we are working on that.” 

However, he added: “The biggest challenge at the moment is the cost [of making] battery-electric vehicles, especially when producing a car [of the size of] the Fabia. We will have to stay a little patient.”

At the launch of the 7S in Prague, it was confirmed that the seven-seat electric SUV will be joined by an urban EV and crossover when it launches, followed by two other electric cars – one of which is expected to be the Fabia replacement. This would earmark it for a launch in the last quarter of the decade.

The successor, it is thought, will look radically different from the Fabia when it launches with Skoda’s new design language – previewed as part of the Vision 7S – hinting more at SUV-style bodywork, rather than the Fabia’s supermini styling.

It is expected to be underpinned by the entry-version of the Volkswagen Group’s MEB architecture, currently used by models such as the Volkswagen ID 3, and be one of the last in the group to use it before the introduction of the new SSP platform. 

This would allow the model to focus on city driving, which Zellmer hinted it would be positioned to do. It could also use a much smaller version of the Vision concept’s 89kWh battery but still take advantage of its rapid 200kW charging rates - a charging speed far quicker than any other mainstream VW Group car.

The launch of this model, coupled with the reveal of the Vision 7S concept, means Skoda is expanding its reach to appeal to a wider audience, Zellmer said.

“This puts us into a wider spread in terms of customers that we can bring to Skoda,” he said. “We are really trying to increase our footprint.

“Cars like that [the Vision 7S] are potentially more profitable, and of course we are in a business to make money, but that is not the main goal. The main goal is to increase our footprint overall, to cover a bigger potential in the market.”

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Will Rimell

Will Rimell
Title: Deputy news editor

Will is a journalist with more than eight years experience in roles that range from news reporter to editor. He joined Autocar in 2022 as deputy news editor, moving from a local news background.

In his current role as deputy news editor, Will’s focus is with Autocar and Autocar Business; he also manages Haymarket's aftermarket publication CAT.

Writing is, of course, a big part of his role too. Stories come in many forms, from interviewing top executives, reporting from car launches, and unearthing exclusives.

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catnip 31 August 2022

Don't we already know about this?

Surely its just Skoda's version of the ID Life (though that will only cost £17.500 ....), a T-Cross sized vehicle that the manufacturers and motoring journalists tell us is a city car.

Dozza 31 August 2022

Never gonna happen. All of these small electric cars are £30k plus today. Pricing the average driver off the road as the WEF intends. 

567 31 August 2022

Dozza - exactly!