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The new electric Mercedes C-Class puts its giant screen front and center

Mercedes previews a richer electric C-Class interior with a dash-wide display, upgraded comfort features, and a stronger push to make the cabin feel like the main event

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Car, Transportation, Vehicle
Interior of the new electric Mercedes-Benz C-Class, 2026. Mercedes-Benz

Mercedes-Benz is using the cabin to make its first electric C-Class feel like a bigger step than a normal model update. Ahead of the car’s April 20 world premiere, it has shown an interior centered on a sweeping digital display, extra space, and a more upscale finish that leans hard into comfort and theater.

The key visual is the new MBUX Hyperscreen, with Mercedes also offering a Superscreen setup. Both are designed to stretch the digital interface across the front of the car and blend the center console into the instrument panel, giving the dashboard a cleaner and more dramatic shape than the current C-Class.

A dash built to impress

Mercedes says the Hyperscreen uses matrix backlighting with about 10 million pixels and adjustable brightness zones. That should help the display do more than just look expensive, with clearer driver information and separate entertainment functions for the front passenger built into the same broad panel.

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The company is also piling on the atmosphere. The new electric C-Class gets ten ambient visual styles, lighting that reaches across the dash, doors, center console, and optional panoramic roof, plus upgraded sound features meant to make the interior feel more immersive on everyday drives.

Comfort gets equal billing

The rest of the cabin is doing plenty of work too. Mercedes says the EV platform and panoramic glass roof open up more room inside, while new high-end seats add massage, ventilation, memory settings, lumbar support, and 4D audio aimed at making long trips easier to live with.

Material choices are another big part of the pitch. Mercedes highlights new trim finishes, metallic details, revised speaker grilles, and a vegan-certified interior package, while also promising quicker cold-weather heating, lower energy use through a heat pump, and a quieter ride through extra insulation and laminated front glass.

The real test comes next

That all sounds promising, but Mercedes is still holding back some of the numbers buyers will care about most, including pricing, trims, range, charging, and performance.

The giant screen grabs attention, though the bigger question is how much of this polished interior will reach versions that sit below the top end of the lineup.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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