2024 Ford Capri: Price, specs and release date

by Ivan Aistrop

The Ford Capri is back, but not in a form you’ll immediately recognise.

When it first appeared in 1969, the original Capri was dubbed “the car you always promised yourself”, and it was a handsomely striking sports coupe designed to bring affordable style and performance to European car-buyers. It was produced across three generations, and by the time the nameplate was finally put out to pasture in 1986, the Capri had become a British automotive icon.

It could be seen as slightly controversial, then, that the company has decided to reprise the nameplate for an all-new electric SUV. Such sacrilege is sure to have the purists percolating, you can guarantee. You’re unlikely to see Bodie and Doyle tearing down an alleyway in one, knocking over dustbins willy-nilly as they go, then, but could the new Capri be the electric SUV your family has been waiting for? Here’s what we know so far…

2024 Ford Capri: Price, specs and release date

Ford Capri Electric front

2024 Ford Capri: styling and dimensions

Ford states that the idea behind the new all-electric Ford Capri is for it to be ‘a sports car for the family’. So, while that meant that the original Capri’s coupe body had to be traded for a roomier crossover-type one, the steeply angled windscreen and a roofline that slopes down towards the rear of the car do make it look a little more rakish than your average SUV.

Ford Capri Electric side

You might notice a nod to the original in the design of the LED headlights, too, each of which gets a two-element light signature. There’s no grille on the front end - there often isn’t with electric vehicles - with a glossy black panel running between the headlights instead.

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Down the side of the new car, there’s a strong shoulder line that runs dead straight almost from nose to tail, with another more subtle crease beneath, running through the front and rear door handles. At the rear end, you’ll find more gloss black panelling running between the narrow LED rear light strips, sitting below that tapering roofline. To our eye, the notchback-like shape of the rear end is rather reminiscent of the Polestar 2, another electric coupe-SUV.

Ford Capri Electric rear

Frozen White is the only paint colour provided as standard; you’ll pay an extra £800 for Agate Black, Magnetic Grey, Lucid Red, the Vivid Yellow seen in our pictures, and cringingly named Blue My Mind.

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In terms of dimensions, the new Capri is 4,634mm long, 2,016 mm wide (1,946mm with door mirrors folded) and 1,626mm tall. The wheelbase is given at 2,767mm.

2024 Ford Capri: interior design and practicality

Much of what you’ll find inside the Capri has already been seen in the new Ford Explorer, another all-electric midsize SUV recently introduced by the company, albeit a rather boxier one.

Ford Capri Electric dash2

You get the same huge storage area in the central partition between the front seats that Ford has chosen to call the ‘MegaConsole’. Terrible name, but it does give you a whopping 17 litres of covered storage.

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You’ll also find the same 14.6-inch SYNC Move central infotainment touchscreen, which has connected navigation, a soundbar speaker system, wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, and wireless phone charging. It looks fab, but in the Explorer, we found certain annoyances about the way it works, so we’ll have to see if these get ironed out for the Capri. And like with the Explorer, the screen in the Capri can be slid up and down to reveal ‘My Private Locker’, a small storage area concealed behind the screen.

Ford Capri Electric locker

Behind the (heated) steering wheel sits a 5.0-inch digital instrument cluster, and the (heated) front seats are similar one-piece affairs to those in the Explorer, so they should be just as supportive.

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As we’ve not got up-close-and-personal with the Capri yet, we can’t tell you how roomy it is inside. However, we do know that there’s plenty of space inside the Explorer, and the Capri is a slightly longer car with a very similar wheelbase, so we’d expect it to be fine. It remains to be seen what effect that roofline has on rear headroom, though.

Ford Capri Electric boot

The 572-litre boot you get in the Capri is bigger than the 470-litre luggage bay in the Explorer. The high-end Capri Premium model gets five litres less, though, presumably due to the additional stereo subwoofer in the boot.

2024 Ford Capri: batteries, motors and drive

Unsurprisingly, the platform and powertrain tech that underpins the Capri is exactly the same as that found underneath the Explorer. What you might find more surprising if you’re not already in the know, though, is that these are the same MEB underpinnings upon which most of the VW Group’s EV offerings are built, so cars like the Volkswagen ID.3, Cupra Born, Skoda Enyaq, Audi Q4 E-Tron and many, many others. That’s due to a deal struck by the two companies to share platforms and parts.

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There are two all-electric powertrain options offered from the outset, and these are known as Extended Range RWD (standing for rear-wheel drive) and Extended Range AWD (all-wheel drive).

Ford Capri Electric driving

As the name suggests, the Extended Range RWD has a single motor delivering 282bhp to the rear wheels. Official figures put the 0-62mph sprint time at 6.4 seconds. The motor is fed by a 77kWh battery (that’s usable capacity) and at a powerful enough DC public rapid charger, it can be charged at a maximum speed of 135kW. This should give a 10-80% charge in 28 minutes, according to Ford.

The Extended Range AWD version adds a second electric motor to the front wheels, making it four-wheel drive, and that raises the total power output to 335bhp. The 0-62mph dash is cut to 5.3 seconds. The battery of the all-wheel-drive car has a slightly higher usable capacity at 79kWh, and this version also has a higher DC maximum charging speed of 185kW. So, despite the larger capacity, that same 10-80% charge can be delivered slightly quicker in 26 minutes.

Ford Capri Electric charging

There are two trim levels available, the regular Capri and the Capri Premium. WLTP driving range figures for the RWD car stand at 390 miles for the Capri and 372 miles for the Premium, while in AWD form, it’s 368 miles for the Capri and 348 miles for the Premium.

The kerb weight stands at well over two tonnes on all versions.

2024 Ford Capri: specifications

Even the base-level Capri comes generously equipped, with 19-inch alloy wheels, keyless entry and start, dual-zone climate control, a massaging driver’s seat, heated front seats and steering wheel, LED headlights with automatic high-beam, rain-sensing wipers, front and rear parking sensors, a rear-view camera, and the full infotainment setup with wireless phone charging, wireless smartphone integration, and seven-speaker sound system with soundbar.

Ford Capri Electric dash3

The standard driver assistance functions on board include automatic emergency braking, intelligent adaptive cruise control with stop and go, clear exit warning, blind spot assist, driver attention function, lane departure warning and a lane-keeping aid, reverse brake assist, and traffic sign recognition.

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Capri Premium trim adds 20-inch wheels (21s are optional on both versions), a panoramic glass roof, ambient lighting, a hands-free tailgate, LED matrix headlights with glare-free high-beam, and an upgraded 10-speaker B&O sound system with soundbar and subwoofer.

Ford Capri Electric megaconsole

An optional Driver Assistance Pack adds a head-up display, lane centring, assisted lane change, active park assist and a 360-degree camera for an additional £1,300. A heat pump is another optional extra costing £1,050, and that feels oddly mean when many electric cars provide one as standard these days.

2024 Ford Capri: price and release date

The new 2024 Ford Capri is on sale now, costing from £48,075 for the RWD powertrain in regular Capri trim. That climbs to £52,175 for the RWD car in Premium trim, while the Premium trim teamed with the AWD powertrain costs from £56,175.

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Ivan Aistrop is a Contributing Editor at CarGurus UK. Ivan has been at the sharp end of UK motoring journalism since 2004, working mostly for What Car?, Auto Trader and CarGurus, as well as contributing reviews and features for titles including Auto Express and Drivetribe.

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