2019 Nissan Juke: prices and specs confirmed
The new Nissan Juke is on sale now with a starting price of £17,395
Prices for the all-new 2019 Nissan Juke have been confirmed. The entry-level Visia model starts from £17,395, with the range-topping Premier Edition costing £23,995. The second-generation Juke is on sale now and represents an extensive overhaul of the dated outgoing model, in terms of both style and technology. It will arrive in dealerships from November.
While five trim levels are available for the new Juke, even the Visia model comes well equipped. Its standard equipment list includes 16-inch steel wheels, LED headlights, air-conditioning, a 4.2-inch TFT screen between the dials on the instrument cluster, as well as safety equipment including automatic emergency braking, lane-keeping assist, cruise control and hill start assist.
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The Juke Acenta starts at £18,995 and features 17-inch alloy wheels, a rear view camera, a Wi-Fi hotspot, and an eight-inch touchscreen infotainment system with Apple CarPlay, Android Auto and voice control recognition.
The mid-range N-Connecta model is £20,995 and has LED fog lights, tinted rear windows, rain-sensing wipers, front and rear parking sensors, and electric and heated door mirrors. Analogue dials are swapped for a seven-inch digital instrument cluster, an auto-dimming rear-view mirror, automatic climate control, ambient lighting, TomTom sat-nav and a leather trimmed steering wheel and gear knob.
The Juke Tekna, priced from £22,495, gets larger 19-inch alloy wheels, a heated front windscreen, heated front seats, a 360-degree camera and a Bose eight-speaker sound system. Further advanced safety features come as standard, namely adaptive cruise control, an advanced driver monitoring system and rear cross-traffic alert.
The Juke Tekna+ features diamond-cut 19-inch alloy wheels, two-tone metallic paint, a satin front skid plate and pearl black trim inserts on the bumpers and side skirts. It costs £23,895.
Nissan is releasing a launch model of the new Juke called the Premiere Edition with more kit inside and out. It’s priced at £23,995 and features special 19-inch alloy wheels, leather and Alcantara-trimmed front sports seats, and a two-tone paint finish in a 'Pearl Black' base coat with a ‘Fuji Sunset Red’ roof and door mirrors.
The new Juke is available with one 115bhp 1.0-litre turbocharged three-cylinder petrol that’s paired with a six-speed manual gearbox or a new seven-speed dual clutch automatic. Both versions are only available with front-wheel drive. The manual does 0-62mph in 10.4 seconds, while the automatic takes 11.1 seconds. The Juke develops 200Nm of torque via an overboost function, reaches a top speed of 112 mph and returns fuel economy of around 45mpg. CO2 emissions are rated at 118g/km for the manual and 116g/km for the automatic.
As the original Juke was one of the most distinctive small SUVs on sale, it’s not surprising that Nissan has kept some of its styling features for the new model. The squat shape, hidden rear door handles and wide wheel arches remain, as do the split-level headlights. LED daytime running lights make up the upper lights, and now sit on the nose instead of on top of the bonnet. The car’s headlights are still round but high-spec versions get three-pronged LED units (entry-level models are likely to have standard halogen lights).
While the last Juke was unlike anything else in the Nissan range at the time, this new version includes some design touches from other Nissan cars; the rear lights and silver-lined grille are similar to those fitted to the Nissan Micra and Nissan Qashqai. You’ll be able to choose from 11 different paint colours, and you can choose a contrasting roof and door mirror caps on top-spec cars. Wheel sizes range from 16-inch steel wheels with plastic covers to 19-inch alloy wheels.
The new Juke is 35mm wider and 75mm longer than the old one but weighs 23kg less. The wheelbase (the distance between the front and rear wheels) is a noticeable 105mm longer than before, which is great news for cabin and boot space. Knee and headroom are up by 58mm and 11mm respectively, so adults will be much happier in the back seats, and the steering wheel now adjusts for reach as well as rake.
Having been on sale for almost a decade, the outgoing Juke’s interior now looks rather dated. The latest model fixes this with a complete redesign that now places a new eight-inch touchscreen on top of the dashboard and three circular air vents. More expensive models will also feature a seven-inch screen in the instrument binnacle.
Underneath, the 2019 Nissan Juke shares a platform with the recently revealed Renault Clio. A hybrid version of the Clio has been confirmed, so a hybrid variant of the Juke is likely to join the range too. It’s likely that a plug-in hybrid version would use a 1.6-litre petrol engine and a 9.8kWh electric battery, giving the Juke a pure-electric driving range of around 20 miles. One of Nissan’s top bosses has previously said that SUVs and electric power is a “perfect combination”, so expect a pure-electric version in the next couple of years as a rival to the Hyundai Kona Electric and Kia e-Niro.
The new platform opens up the possibility of new engines, so the Juke could eventually use the 1.3-litre petrol engine that’s found in the current Qashqai, Renault Kadjar, Dacia Duster and the new Mercedes A-Class.
An added benefit of the new platform is increased boot space, which now makes the Juke a much more viable alternative to the Skoda Kamiq, SEAT Arona and Renault Captur. There’s now 422 litres of boot space - 68 more than its predecessor - and the boot opening is wider and easier to access thanks to a redesigned tailgate.
The Juke will continue to be built in the UK at Nissan’s Sunderland plant, which has produced over a million examples of the car to date.
The current Juke, launched back in 2011, essentially kick-started the popularity of small, front-wheel-drive SUVs and crossovers. Almost every car manufacturer now makes a car of its size - including upmarket versions such as the Audi Q2 and Mercedes GLA. The current Juke, however, has been somewhat left behind by newer alternatives.
If you want to know more about the new Nissan Juke, why not read our prototype drive review.
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