Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. News

Take an early peek inside the next-generation Mercedes-Benz A-Class

Add as a preferred source on Google

Mercedes-Benz has released the first official images of the brand-new fourth-generation A-Class. The shots give us an early look at what the compact model looks like on the inside.

The dashboard takes on a more modern appearance than the one in the current car, which is undeniably showing its age as it reaches the end of its life cycle. Designers kept the switch gear to a minimum to bring the brand’s smallest car in line with the rest of the lineup. The dual-screen setup is a hand-me-down from the bigger E-Class and S-Class models. Whether it will come standard or land on the list of extra-cost options remains to be seen.

Recommended Videos

Additional details about the A-Class are beginning to trickle out. We know it will ride on the next evolution of the brand’s front-wheel drive platform. The architecture will also underpin the replacements for the CLA, the CLA Shooting Brake, the GLA, and the B-Class, plus an array of new models set to join Mercedes’ compact family in the coming years. All-wheel drive will be offered at an extra cost on select trim levels.

On the powertrain front, the volume engines will remain four-cylinder units. The diesel-burning model will carry on across the pond, but it will be joined by a plug-in hybrid — a first in the nameplate’s history — a little later in the production run. An explosive AMG-tuned variant with at least 400 horsepower on tap from a turbo four will serve as the model’s flagship.

Normally, the A-Class wouldn’t matter much to us. It’s been on the market for 20 years and Mercedes has never distributed it in the United States due in part to its small size and image concerns associated with the segment it competes in. That’s set to change with the upcoming generation.

Mercedes will split the A-Class lineup into a hatchback and a sedan model for the first time. It previewed the sedan with a design-led, close-to-production concept unveiled earlier this year at the Shanghai Auto Show. We most likely won’t get the hatchback, but we know for a fact the three-box variant is being developed with Americans in mind. It will compete in the same segment as the Audi A3 Sedan when it arrives here either late next year or in early 2019.

Ronan Glon
Ronan Glon is an American automotive and tech journalist based in southern France. As a long-time contributor to Digital…
The Wild West era of robotaxis is starting to end
New global rules could replace patchwork regulation with stricter safety proof for driverless fleets.
Self driving car from Waymo

Robotaxi rules have entered their first global phase. A UN vehicle standards forum has adopted the first international framework for fully autonomous vehicles, giving driverless fleets a common safety baseline across major markets.

The move lands while robotaxis are expanding from test programs into a bigger commercial race. In the US and China, private fleets more than doubled in 2025 to 8,000 vehicles across more than two dozen major cities.

Read more
Google Meet finally lands on Android Auto, giving you one less excuse to skip a meeting
Android users can now join scheduled meetings and audio calls from their car's dashboard, catching up to what iPhone users have had for months.
Google Meet on Android Auto

Android Auto is finally getting Google Meet, months after the video conferencing app made its debut on Apple CarPlay. Android users can now pull up scheduled meetings and dial recent contacts straight from their car's display instead of reaching for their phone.

How it works behind the wheel

Read more
Waymo’s robotaxis keep finding new things to drive into, and construction zones are the latest
Thirteen construction zone incidents, one fleet recall, and a passenger who thought the end was near.
A Hyundai Ioniq 5 is equipped as a robotaxi.

Waymo has recalled its entire fleet of nearly 4,000 robotaxis to prevent them from driving on highways after identifying at least 13 instances where its vehicles drove straight into highway sections closed for construction. 

This is the company's sixth recall in under a year, and follows separate incidents involving flooded roads, telephone poles, chains and gates, towed trucks, and school buses.

Read more