Currently reading: Fiat trialling tech that fully charges 500e in just five minutes

Fiat CEO Olivier François said battery-swapping tech will be offered to customers if trial is successful

Stellantis is trialling battery-swapping technology with the Fiat 500e in a bid to offer full EV recharging in just five minutes.

If the trial is successful, this could eliminate one of the biggest barriers to EV ownership: charging time.

Currently taking place in Madrid, the trial involves a small fleet of 40 500es that have been adapted to use a pack (of unspecified size) from battery-swapping firm Ample.

The fleet is operated by Stellantis-owned car-sharing firm Free2Move and being driven by users in the city.

The cars are currently serviced by a single battery-swapping station, but more are planned to be created in the city as part of the trial, which has been supported by a €9.8 million (£8.2m) grant from the Spanish government.

What’s more, Stellantis plans to expand the fleet to 100 cars in the coming months.

If the trial is successful, the technology will be offered to private customers, promised Fiat CEO Olivier François.

“We are dedicated to thoroughly testing and analysing this concept in real-world conditions and aiming to expand it to private customers soon," he said.

“That is why we believe deeply in this project and have chosen our iconic Fiat 500 to spearhead the initiative.

"It will provide invaluable insights for both our brand and the group as we shape the future of mobility.”

It's unclear if the trial will be expanded to other Stellantis EVs, given that the 500e is based on a bespoke platform and not the e-CMP EV platform used by Citroën, Peugeot, Vauxhall et al.

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Will Rimell

Will Rimell Autocar
Title: News editor

Will is Autocar's news editor.​ His focus is on setting Autocar's news agenda, interviewing top executives, reporting from car launches, and unearthing exclusives.

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streaky 15 June 2025

I know the Chinese are into this, but I don't think this technology will be relevant in the future; battery technology, both range and charging speeds are improving all the time so this won't be needed.  Woe betide any company that invests in the considerable infrastructure required to store, charge up and swap batteries at numerous outlets - they're going to make a big, big loss!

scrap 15 June 2025

Highly misleading headline. This is a battery swap scheme, not a fast charger technology.

Peter Cavellini 13 June 2025

Hmmm, not a journey thing then?, only a City situation.