Stellantis officially launched the Fiat Topolino in the US on July 7, 2026, priced at $13,995 before destination fee. While it is genuinely one of the most charming-looking EVs ever to cross the Atlantic, there are some fairly important caveats buried beneath all that dolce vita energy.
It is a two-seat, fully electric low-speed vehicle roughly the size of a golf cart, because it essentially is one.

So what exactly is the Topolino?
Underneath the retro-Italian styling sits a 5.4 kWh battery, a 46-mile maximum range, and a top speed of 19 mph.
At that speed, it is legally restricted to private property, resort communities, and golf cart-friendly neighborhoods. If you want to take the Topolino on a public road, you’ll need the LSV conversion kit, which the company promises to launch by the end of summer 2026.
Even then, the EV will max out at 25 mph, limiting you to roads with a speed limit of 35 mph or lower. It weighs 1,073 pounds and charges fully in about five hours.

Is $13,995 actually a fair price for what you’re getting?
That is the uncomfortable question. Two versions are available: the hardtop Topolino with a panoramic sunroof and the Dolcevita with a roll-back soft top; both look fantastic in photos.
On paper, though, you’re paying near-Fiat-500e money for something slower than a bicycle on a hill and more limited than a neighborhood golf cart.
Polaris, Club Car, and GEM all sell LSVs with comparable or superior range and utility at lower prices. What you are paying for, unambiguously, is the badge and the aesthetic, and honestly, for some buyers in the right zip code, that might be enough.

Fiat is betting Americans will pay a $14,000 premium for Italian design over comparable LSVs that cost less and do more. For people with private properties, golf courses, or those after lifestyle vehicles, it might just work fine.