CITROEN C4 CACTUS (2014-2018)

By Jonathan Crouch

Models Covered

5dr small SUV (1.2 petrol, 1.6 BlueHDi 100 diesel [Touch, Feel, Flair, W, Rip Curl])

Introduction

Bold and original, Citroen’s C4 Cactus combines innovation, style and function in one striking, design-led piece of family transport. It won’t be for everyone but if you’re the sort who likes to go your own way, this compact, affordable and very Gallic take on modern motoring could be right up your street. Here, we’re looking at the original 2013-2017-era version of this car as a potential used buy.

The History

To the cynical eye, it would seem that there's very little that’s clever, fresh and different about mainstream model automotive design. In fact, a common refrain amongst car buyers is that many small superminis and family hatchbacks look pretty much the same, delivering only slight and insignificant variations on a tired and well-worn theme. What the market really needs, it seems, is a mass maker able to bring us cars that are quirky, thought-provoking and forward thinking. A brand like French maker Citroen used to be: the kind of brand that today, it aims to be once more. For proof of that, in 2014, it delivered us this, the C4 Cactus.

This car had no direct predecessor and – if you believe its maker anyway – no direct rivals. In buying it, you get a lightweight, comfort-orientated, bargain-priced, innovatively-designed compact family car – and if you know your Citroens, you’ll know the sort of thing that kind of design brief references. Back in 1948, the marque brought Europe the clever economy runabout that would come to define post-war France, the 2CV, a model created around almost exactly the same principles that have driven development of this one. OK, so the two cars aren’t quite the same: we can’t see too many C4 Cactus buyers bumping their machines over ploughed fields, hosing down their interiors or passing their cars on like family heirlooms. Otherwise though, the simply, sturdy, spacious formula pioneered by the ‘deux chevaux’ over forty two years of production was passed over intact.

There’s history here then, though whether it’s relevant to the modern market is another question. Many of today’s buyers are certainly looking for something different from yet another standard supermini or family hatch, but they aren’t necessarily attracted by wilful quirkiness. There was no place, in other words, for this car to be different simply for the sake of being so. Nor is it. All of the things that make a C4 Cactus stand out are, according to Citroen, there for a very good reason. For example, the design is full of thoughtful touches that might look strange at first glance but together will save enough weight to cut your running costs by over 20% compared against something more conventional .And, of course, you’ll have noticed the ‘Airbump’ plastic cladding that’s the first thing your neighbours will want to talk about: it’s there to make light panel damage a thing of the past.

It’s that cladding, probably more than any other single thing, that prompted most reviewers to class this car in amongst those in the industry’s fastest growing market segment, that for compact ‘Crossovers’, compact family hatch and supermini-based models with an extra dose of style and attitude. At the launch of this model, Citroen agreed that cars of this kind like Nissan’s Juke and Renault’s Captur were probably closest in concept to this Cactus but made it clear that it also wanted this particular C4 to have an even wider brief. They called it a ‘Crosshatch’, referencing design and positioning that here sees individuality being about more than just ‘SUV-ness’. It’s an approach that the French brand hoped buyers shopping in the compact car-segment would find rather refreshing. They did and the C4 Cactus sold strongly in its original form. However, in late 2017, Citroen launched a C3 Aircross small SUV that offered much of what the original version of this car delivered, causing the C4 Cactus to be facelifted and re-positioned as a quirky family hatchback, rather than any kind of Crossover. It’s the earlier model though, that we consider here.

What To Look For

We found plenty of satisfied C4 Cactus customers in our ownership survey but inevitably, there were a few issues reported. The auto gearbox wasn’t generally liked. Otherwise, most of the problems tended to centre on electrical issues with things like the sat-nav and air-con. A few owners reported various suspension faults. One buyer complained of a creaky, squeaking clutch. Another found that the rear pop-out window latch came loose. All are things to look out for on your test drive.

On The Road

Think of this Cactus as simple, straightforward family transport and you’ll bond better with it. Though shaped like a Focus-sized family hatch, it’s actually based on a stretched version of the simpler chassis that undergirds Citroen’s C3 supermini. And most of the engines it runs with are borrowed from the C3 too, with the range entry-point covered by 75 and 82bhp ‘PureTech’ petrol powerplants that wouldn’t be up to shifting along the brand’s much heavier C4. The top 110bhp version of this 1.2-litre three cylinder unit very definitively is though, which means it can move this lighter Cactus along with alacrity.

There was a single diesel version, the BlueHDi 100 variant, a model capable of marrying a 10.7s 0-62mph sprint time and a 114mph top speed to 83mpg combined cycle economy and a squeaky clean 90g/km CO2 reading.

The car is impressively comfortable in the city, where the reasonably tight turning circle and a supple, absorbent ride make it a pleasant commuting companion. The suspension set-up’s a simple one, but it’s been expertly tuned to iron out the scars and undulations of our country’s terrible tarmac in a way that few rivals can emulate. Trendy town folk were the people that Citroen was mainly be targeting with the automatic versions of this car – the variants you have to go for to have the clever full-width sofa-style front seat.

Overall

With this C4 Cactus, the Citroen brand returned to being distinctive, innovative and different. This was a Citroen straight from the Chevron old school, quirky, striking and uniquely Gallic.

All of which would probably be enough to justify this car’s existence even if it wasn’t so impressively efficient and practical. As it is, adding in these sensible virtues to a package of idiosyncratic ones has created a refreshing alternative to compact automotive mundanity. Which leaves us with what? A car that target buyers will see as simple, sensible and stylish. A car that makes frugality a little more fun.

That’s a concept we can all buy into.