Skip advert
Advertisement

Abarth 595 – engine, gearbox and technical highlights

All Abarths use a peppy 1.4-litre turbo engine, with varying outputs from model to model

Evo rating
  • Funky design; nimble handling; strong performance
  • Lacks finesse and adjustability; bouncy ride

It’s relatively simple here – all 595s are powered by a 1.4-litre four-cylinder turbocharged powerplant under the T-Jet banner. The only difference between each model is the power and torque it produces due to different turbochargers, air filters and ECU tuning, and the way it sounds courtesy of standard, Record Monza and Akrapovic exhaust systems depending on trim level.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Things kick off with a 143bhp at 5500rpm and 152lb ft at 3000rpm model in the basic Abarth 595, with a standard exhaust system. Next up is the Trofeo, which makes 158bhp at 5500rpm and 170lb ft at 3000rpm, but gets an Abarth air filter and the Record Monza exhaust.

The Turismo makes 5bhp more at the same revs and identical torque, but interestingly gets a Garrett turbocharger rather than an IHI, a different intake system, but the standard Abarth exhaust. Competizione models get the same turbo and intake, but other tweaks and the use of the Record Monza exhaust lift power to 178bhp at 5500rpm and 184lb ft of torque at 3000rpm.

The luxurious Rivale again gets the same turbo and intake and makes the same power and torque, but switches the Record Monza exhaust system for one from Akrapovic.

A five-speed manual transmission was standard on all 595s and 695s, but the Turismo, Competizione and Rivale were additionally available with a five-speed automated manual transmission. 

Technically, all Abarths are fairly conventional under the skin, powering their front wheels alone and suspended by struts at the front with a torsion beam at the back, and anti-roll bars both ends.

All models use frequency-selective dampers on at least the front axle, a kind of non-electronic active damping technology developed by Koni, but Trofeo models and up get actual Koni units on the rear and Competizione and Rivales get Konis at both ends, as well as Brembo front brakes. A limited-slip differential is also available on the range-toppers.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Land Rover Defender Octa review – the super SUV that’s more fun than sports cars
Land Rover Defender Octa – front
In-depth reviews

Land Rover Defender Octa review – the super SUV that’s more fun than sports cars

Put aside your SUV cynicism. The Land Rover Defender Octa is a triumph, with 911 GT3 levels of engineering making it an unexpected thrill to drive
8 Jan 2026
Toyota GR Yaris Morizo RR is the 911 GT3 RS of hot hatchbacks
Toyota GR Yaris Morizo RR
News

Toyota GR Yaris Morizo RR is the 911 GT3 RS of hot hatchbacks

Limited run GR Yaris Morizo RR was inspired by its Nürburging 24 hour performance and championed by the company boss.
9 Jan 2026
Used Alpinas – four tuned BMW Bahnstormers from the end of an era
Used Alpinas
News

Used Alpinas – four tuned BMW Bahnstormers from the end of an era

Alpina is to be reinvented under full BMW ownership – the perfect excuse to buy into a used one
7 Jan 2026