Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. Photo Galleries
  4. News

Here’s our first look at Elio Motors’ 84-mpg P5 prototype

Add as a preferred source on Google

For most of the automotive collective, November 18 was a banner day at the 2015 LA Auto Show. We saw the debut of the beautiful Fiat 124 Spider, the wraps came off the 10th-generation Honda Civic Coupe for the first time, and the topless Range Rover Evoque caused quite the commotion for better or for worse. On November 19, though, another car was unveiled to the public, one you might call the people’s main event.

With much anticipation, Arizona startup Elio Motors debuted its P5 prototype vehicle in LA, which closely previews the three-wheeled, 84-mpg, $6,800 commuter car that aims to go on sale at the end of next year. The prototype features a new, longer front end that is more aerodynamic than its predecessor, as well as side exhausts and a 0.9-liter, 55-horsepower, three-cylinder engine that was developed specifically for Elio. The car isn’t special for its unique looks or performance though, rather its blend of financial accessibility and low operating costs, both of which could grant unprecedented amounts of mobility to those less fortunate.

Thus far, 47,331 interested parties have plunked down cash to reserve their slots. But after a multitude of funding-related delays — the vehicle has been “coming soon” for years — there are still doubts that the car will ever be sold. Automotive startups come and go with frequency, so with the P5 at his back, Elio explained why his company would not suffer the same fate.

“I think we’re doing things different in a lot of ways,” he said. “First of all, there’s no new technology allowed on this vehicle. We call it the ‘four musts’ on every engineer’s desk: 84 mpg, $6,800, safe, no new technology. Every part on this vehicle is either in production or [a] slight modification from something that’s already in production, so we substantially mitigate the technical risk.”

Elio Motors P4 Prototype
Paul Elio with the P4 prototype Image used with permission by copyright holder

Combined with an ever-growing list of suppliers, an inherited production facility from General Motors’ 2009 bankruptcy, and a “decent margin” embedded in the car’s base price, Elio is confident that the car’s fourth quarter 2016 release date will come to fruition. That being said, there is still a long way to go.

To manufacture the vehicle, Elio Motors needs about $300 million. The brand has raised about $75 million so far, with another $186 million pending with the Department of Energy’s ATVM loan program. A new rule passed by the SEC allows Elio to sell stock to non-accredited investors as well, and the company claims it could bring in another $25 million or so. The numbers (sorta) add up, but as any fundraiser will tell you, pledged dollars are not the same as real dollars.

Finances are one thing, but the product itself seems to make a lot of sense. Technically a motorcycle given its three-wheeled status, the P5 could potentially be cheaper to insure than most cars, and consequentially, it should be able to drive in HOV lane. It’s also much safer than a bike with its full roll cage, two seat belts, three airbags, electronic stability control, and ABS system. If you ask Elio, it’s pretty excitable behind the wheel as well.

“It’s fun,” he proclaimed. “The architecture itself is fun — sitting right between the front two wheels — and the motor and transmission work very well. It’s fun to drive.”

Without a doubt, the stakes for Elio Motors are high. We just hope that the vehicle, which seems to be perpetually coming next year, brings its three-wheeled flavor of fun to the streets soon. Watch the full P5 unveiling below.

Elio Motors unveils the P5 at the LA Auto Show
Andrew Hard
Andrew first started writing in middle school and hasn't put the pen down since. Whether it's technology, music, sports, or…
China has new EV safety rules ready. The US needs to follow in its footsteps
Mandatory battery fire protections and hard power cutoffs show what a tougher EV safety playbook could look like in the U.S.
EV

China's EV safety rules are about to make automakers prove their cars can fail safely, not merely warn people before trouble spreads.

Starting July 1, 2026, two mandatory national standards will require stronger battery safeguards and a physical one-touch way to cut high-voltage power during an emergency. The pressure points are the ones drivers, firefighters, insurers, and regulators can't brush aside for much longer, including battery fires, crash damage, smoke exposure, and rescue access after a severe incident.

Read more
Mercedes’s Chinese partner made an EV that costs under $10,000 and looks deceptively stylish
At around $10,000, the Arcfox Beta T1 has a feature list that embarrasses several $30,000 US EVs.
Car, Transportation, Vehicle

BAIC, the Beijing-based automaker that produces Mercedes-Benz vehicles in China, has launched the refreshed Arcfox Beta T1 on June 16, a compact EV priced roughly between $9,200 and $11,700, depending on the trim.

It's not coming to the United States, but the fact that its most affordable version undercuts the cheapest new car sold here by roughly $13,000 and the cheapest EV by almost $20,000 deserves some attention. What BAIC has built here is a direct indictment of the higher EV costs here in America.

Read more
The world’s biggest battery maker just pumped the brakes on solid-state EV hype
CATL chairman Robin Zeng says the technology is still in lab-phase development, with mass-market deployment unlikely before 2030.
Architecture, Building, Shop

Solid-state batteries have been hyped as the technology that will transform electric vehicles, promising higher energy density, faster charging, and improved safety over the lithium-ion cells powering most cars today. But the head of the world's largest battery maker says buyers should not hold their breath.

CATL chairman Dr. Robin Zeng told Caijing Magazine (via CarNewsChina) that large-scale commercialization of solid-state batteries will not be achievable before 2030. The company has set a threshold of 1 million vehicles as the production volume required to justify mass deployment, a figure that remains out of reach for the foreseeable future. When solid-state cells do reach the market, Zeng said initial integration will be limited to premium vehicles priced above 250,000 yuan (roughly $37,000).

Read more