Jordan Mulach
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Mercedes-Benz C-Class
Price not available
8.4
CarExpert Rating
Safety Rating
NA
Warranty
NA
Fuel Efficiency
NA
Pros
- Beautiful interior displays
- Excellent cabin noise-suppression
- Smooth and quiet electrified engines
Cons
- Price increases
- No wagon options this time
- Fiddly steering wheel controls
Mercedes-Benz C-Class Rating
Mercedes-Benz C-Class News
2024 Mercedes-Benz C-Class Reviews
2024 Mercedes-Benz C-Class Boot Space
Boot space is 455L with the rear seats upright.
2024 Mercedes-Benz C-Class Gallery
CarExpert High Resolution Photos of the Mercedes-Benz C-Class
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2024 Mercedes-Benz C-Class Safety Rating
The new-generation Mercedes-Benz C-Class has yet to be tested by ANCAP or Euro NCAP.
Standard safety equipment includes:
- 10 airbags including a centre-front airbag
- AEB with pedestrian/cyclist detection
- Surround-view cameras
- Front and rear parking sensors
- Semi-autonomous parking assist
- Adaptive cruise control
- Driver attention monitoring
- Lane-keep assist (steering assist)
- Blind-spot monitoring with exit warning function
- Active bonnet
- Speed limit assist
The Driving Assistance Package Plus, standard on the C300, adds the following standard safety features:
- AEB junction assist
- Adaptive cruise control with stop/go
- Blind-spot assist
- Lane change assist
- Lane following assist
- Evasive steering assist
- Side-impact anticipation and protection system
- Traffic sign assist
2024 Mercedes-Benz C-Class Fuel Economy
Claimed combined cycle fuel economy figures for the Mercedes-Benz C-Class range are as follows:
- C200: 6.9L/100km
- C300: 7.3L/100km
Both of these models require 98 RON premium unleaded petrol and have a 66L fuel tank.
How does the 2024 Mercedes-Benz C-Class drive?
Our expert take on Mercedes-Benz C-Class drivability.
The new C-Class moves over to the latest ‘MRA’ platform, and shares a lot of similarities with the top of the Mercedes tree S-Class. Over the old car it has a new four-link front axle and five-link rear mounted to a subframe.
Passive dampers come standard, with active dampers to be made available in a package – although said package is currently not available in Australia due to chip shortages.
The same soon to arrive package adds rear-wheel steering, a neat feature which turns the back wheels the opposite way to the fronts at low speeds, and the same at speeds above 60km/h, thereby shaving 43cm from the turning circle and enhancing higher-speed stability.
The thing that really stands out on the new C-Class is the amazing noise, vibration and harshness (NVH) suppression, with the interior feeling relaxing even over some classic coarse-chip Aussie back roads. Many European luxury cars utterly fail this test, but not the new C-Class.
The electric power steering default is low-resistance but syncs to the driving mode selector alongside ESP, throttle and transmission shift points, plus the dampers where applicable. You control all these via a slick home screen menu, with button shortcuts.
Even on 19-inch wheels the ride quality felt relatively good (on roads of MB’s choosing), and we drove both damper choices since a few early-build cars with the Engineering Package have landed. Neither struck me as excessively firm.
The best part about both mild-hybrid engines is again the refinement, with the stop/start systems almost imperceptible, and the engine shutting off at high speeds (and times of low-resistance) quite frequently. Any major torque hole down low felt filled-in too.
The C200 felt sprightly enough, but stepping into the C300 certainly brought about a little greater rolling response. That said, you’re expected to pay a decent premium for it…
From a driver safety standpoint, the new C does a great job of helping you keep your eyes where they should be, with a ton of different setting and menus to cycle through on your instruments (including maps and driver-assist status guides), and the voice control system lets you handle many functions from changing the cabin temperature through to opening the sunroof.
2024 Mercedes-Benz C-Class Options
Options list for the Mercedes-Benz C-Class
You can find more details on all the options and inclusions across the Mercedes-Benz C-Class variants on the official website, and within the official Mercedes-Benz C-Class specifications page.
2024 Mercedes-Benz C-Class Colours
What colours are available for the Mercedes-Benz C-Class
The C-Class is available in the following exterior paint colours:
- Spectral Blue metallic
- High-Tech Silver metallic
- Opalite White metallic
- Hyacinth Red metallic
- Obsidian Black metallic
- Graphite grey metallic
- Mojave Silver metallic
- Cavansite Blue metallic
- Selenite Grey metallic
- Polar White
2024 Mercedes-Benz C-Class Warranty
All 2022 Mercedes-Benz C-Class models are covered by a five-year, unlimited kilometre warranty.
2024 Mercedes-Benz C-Class vs other Sedan's to consider
The C-Class has long been one of the go-to compact premium sedans, but competition is as stiff as ever.
In this latest iteration, the fifth-generation C-Class puts a real focus on luxury, comfort and refinement, meaning if you want the most high-end-feeling vehicle in the segment, the Benz should probably be at the top of your list.
Rivals like the BMW 3 Series and Jaguar XE have a more sporting skew, while the Audi A4 is more understated in its presentation both in terms of styling and appointments.
Should you buy the 2024 Mercedes-Benz C-Class
Is this the right car for you? Out experts buy or not guide.
The prices are up, but the C-Class feels more like a baby S than ever.
In terms of interior displays, finishes, ride comfort, refinement, and subtle-yet-elegant design, it remains a class leader.
If you’ve been waiting to upgrade your W205 for a W206, there isn’t a heap to disappoint you – lack of wagon and new price positioning aside.
We’re also eagerly awaiting the eventual long-range plug-in hybrid, and Mercedes-AMG C43 and C63 derivatives to drop, to fill out the range.