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Nissan reveals Juke EV and I dearly hope this bold design stays

The new Nissan Juke EV is gloriously weird, and that’s exactly the point

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Nissan Juke EV Front
Nissan Juke EV Nissan

Nissan has officially taken the wraps off the next Juke, and it looks like the company is embracing some quirkiness for its design. In official material published by Nissan, the all-new third-generation Juke has been revealed as a fully electric compact crossover for Europe.

Nissan says this is the first-ever 100% electric Juke, that it will be built on the CMF-EV platform, and that production will take place at the company’s Sunderland plant in the UK. The launch is planned for 2027, making this one of the more important pieces of Nissan’s European EV push.

Why this Nissan EV caught my eye

The Juke has always been one of those cars that people either found fun or faintly ridiculous, but it was never boring. Based on Nissan’s official release snippet, the new model is being pitched as a “bold evolution” of the Juke formula rather than a complete reset, which is exactly what it needed.

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That is why I dearly hope this design stays intact by the time the production version finally hits the road. A lot of EVs still end up looking overly smoothed-out in the name of efficiency, and while that makes sense on paper, it also makes the segment feel visually sleepy. The Juke carved its own space because it looks a little dramatic, a little mischievous, and very clearly unlike the safe default crossover template.

This is bigger than just one quirky EV

Nissan is not treating the Juke EV like a side experiment. The company has tied it directly to its wider European electrification strategy, and Sunderland remains central to that plan. Nissan previously said the plant would play a key role in its EV future, and the new Juke now becomes part of that longer-term effort alongside the next-generation Leaf and wider electrified lineup changes.

Reuters also reported this week that Nissan unveiled an electric Juke as part of a broader restructuring and product strategy under CEO Ivan Espinosa, showing that this is not just a design tease but a real part of the company’s turnaround plan.

For now, Nissan has not published the full spec sheet, range, or pricing in the material surfaced through its official news channels. So the real test will come later, when the production version is finalized. Still, Nissan did not just electrify the Juke, it seems to understand that a Juke also needs to look like a Juke.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
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