Ford Puma Gen-E

Premium

Ford Puma Gen-E, 2026, front, action
Ford Puma Gen-E, 2026, front
Ford Puma Gen-E, 2026, side
Ford Puma Gen-E, 2026, rear
Ford Puma Gen-E, 2026, interior
Ford Puma Gen-E, 2026, instrument panel
Ford Puma Gen-E, 2026, display screen
Ford Puma Gen-E, 2026, gear selector
Ford Puma Gen-E, 2026, charging port
Ford Puma Gen-E, 2026, rear seats
Ford Puma Gen-E, 2026, frunk
Ford Puma Gen-E, 2026, boot, underfloor
Ford Puma Gen-E, 2026, boot
Ford Puma Gen-E, 2026, badge

FORD has taken a traditionally cautious approach towards its pure electric range and it's reaping the benefits without disappointing familiar buyers and going out on a limb.

It has scaled back on its pure EV future and written off a £14.5 billion investment as it refocuses on future models.

Broadly, it is going to fall in line with rivals who are now preparing to offer a range of petrol, mild and plug-in hybrids along with pure electric models in selected markets.

It wants to have the widest possible appeal to a very diverse customer base.

So, the highly successful stylish petrol Puma has been joined by a fully electric Gen-E derivative, which uses a modified platform from the ICE version.

The result is a model that has the positive handling now wrapped around an economical ev-powertrain in a compact SUV bodystyle, which is the UK's sales leading shape.

Our upper grade Premium Gen-E came with18-inch alloy wheels, a powered tailgate, keyless entry and start, a premium Bang and Olufsen sound system and intelligent bright Matrix LED headlights.

The powertrain is fairly conservative with a real world 43kWh battery and 168ps electric motor driving the front wheels and a single speed transmission.

It develops 290Nm and with a below average class weight of 1,563kg it is good for a sub nine seconds to 62mph and a useful 99mph top speed where conditions allow.

However, pushing it that hard will rapidly drain the battery and over a series of recharges will recorded an average range showing of just over 200 miles. That's fair but not fantastic.

It means with a typical charge taking about 25 mins to over seven hours depending on flow rate, you have a good range for commuting but will need a few top ups on longer trips.

Ford engineers have done a very good job in making the Puma Gen-E feel as responsive yet taut handling as its petrol stablemate, but you have to put up with a firm and frequently noisy ride on the Premium's 18-inch wheels and 55-aspect low profile tyres.

Steering was well weighted with good feedback to the driver, the brakes were reassuring every time and the parking brake securely held it on steeper hills.

Setting the system through the on-screen panels meant a single-pedal boosted retardation and regeneration and made for easy town traffic use.

There are four possible driving modes at a driver's fingertips touch-panel and each made an immediate change to the car's character and performance, which was very pleasing: Eco, Normal, Sport and Individual.

Secondary switches were well laid out on the spokes but the combined stalk for indicators, front and rear wipers and washers was a busy bundle.

Essential dials infront of the driver were big, clear and quickly understood although their appearance changed with the chosen driving modes.

The central 12-inch touchscreen was also nicely angled towards the driver and the menus could be quickly changed and were always clear.

Heating and ventilation was comprehensive, quick acting and quiet, backed up by powered windows.

Visibility was poor to the rear but clear to sides and in front with lots of glass area and bright headlights but slow reacting to automatically change. The reversing camera was a necessity.

Oddments space was good but not too generous is what is a family car with a lot of small compartments throughout, but that contrasted with the massive boot, its underfloor box and quick folding back seats.

Access to the boot was through an electrically assisted fifth door and the cabin was also easy to climb into or out of with fairly wide opening doors.

Once inside, legroom could be tight in the back but headroom was clear and infront the room was good in all ways. Seats were nicely shaped and supporting with adequate adjustment settings on the front pair.

The seats softened but could not completely cope with the firm suspension and pothole hating suspension.

It stayed where you pointed it and never really went off-line with good responses to the steering, throttle and brakes.

The Ford Puma Gen-E was easy to live with, fairly economical to charge and generally enjoyable as a commuting car but long trips need extra thought.

£29,995 (inc ev grant)

168ps electric motor, 43kWh battery, driving front wheels via single speed gearbox

99mph

8.8 secs

201 miles

19

3%

3yrs/60,000 miles, 8yrs/100,000 battery

3

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