NewsBite

Mercedes-Benz CLE Coupe and Convertible review

This stylish throwback represents an alternative to the world of heavy and high-riding SUVs.

Does the Mercedes-AMG C63 bring high-tech performance in 2024?

The Mercedes-Benz CLE is an exercise in streamlining and common sense.

The German prestige giant has spent recent decades filling its showrooms with endless model ranges; finding niches within niches and providing answers to questions nobody asked.

The CLE name may be new, but Benz has axed its C-Class and E-Class coupes to facilitate its birth. It’s a two-door middle ground if you will, available in Coupe and Cabriolet formats.

2024 Mercedes-Benz CLE Convertible. Photo: Supplied
2024 Mercedes-Benz CLE Convertible. Photo: Supplied

The result’s an aggressively elegant four-seater which feels as roomy and imposing as the retired E-Class Coupe, while the drive experience is classic Benz: smooth, refined, comfy and with just enough engagement for mountain road weekend escapes.

As most brands – Mercedes included – feed our market’s sugar rush for SUVs, there’s a refreshing old-world charm to the CLE’s look, feel and drive.

A “proper” car, it has a low centre of gravity, two spacious rear seats and a boot able to swallow three golf bags. After a full day’s country touring, I can happily report Benz has delivered exactly what the prestige grand tourer shopper expects. It’s an utter delight to pilot.

Shame, then, so few Aussies will pick a CLE over Benz’s strongest-selling GLC SUV costing roughly the same price.

2024 Mercedes-Benz CLE Convertible. Photo: Supplied
2024 Mercedes-Benz CLE Convertible. Photo: Supplied

The CLE’s not cheap. The cheapest model, a 200 Coupe with a 150kW/320Nm turbo petrol 2.0-litre, costs about $111,000 drive-away.

For all-wheel-drive and more guts, a 300 Coupe finds 190kW/400Nm from its 2.0-litre, and is in the traffic for about $133,000. The CLE 300 Cabrio with electric soft-top pushes things to about $147,000 drive-away.

Rivals are cheaper. The BMW 4 Series starts from a little more than $90,000 and the Audi A5 $100,000, on the road. But subjectively speaking, the uber-elegant Benz has them licked for style.

The cabin feels expensive. Front seats are superbly supportive, and the 200’s faux-leather trim has solid material quality, looking best in brown or beige as a no-cost option.

2024 Mercedes-Benz CLE Convertible. Photo: Supplied
2024 Mercedes-Benz CLE Convertible. Photo: Supplied

It’s $2900 to option real leather – it’s standard in the CLE 300 – and red’s added to the colour selection. This vibrant hue offers classic coupe nostalgia.

This blends with bang-up-to-date modernity; a customisable 12.3-inch driver display complementing a square 11.9-inch central infotainment screen.

There’s a stack of menus to navigate and most will feel a little overwhelmed by the giant head-up display and augmented reality navigation. There’s much to learn.

But it has spoil-yourself features. A panoramic sunroof, Nappa leather steering wheel, wireless phone charging, a Burmester 3D surround sound, 360-degree camera and heated memory seats.

2024 Mercedes-Benz CLE Convertible. Photo: Supplied
2024 Mercedes-Benz CLE Convertible. Photo: Supplied

At night the 64-colour ambient cabin lighting offers anything from a jungle green room to a pink palace to a seedy nightclub – there’s necessary X-factor here to attract younger shoppers.

If kids are involved, this two-door’s rear seats are accessed via a Nappa leather loop rather than cheap plastic handle. As a six-footer my head touched the ceiling (not a drama in the Cabrio), but leg room’s excellent.

As is the overall drive. On imperfect roads it’s a dash firm on standard 19-inch alloys and skinny rubber, but keep the Dynamic Select drive mode in Comfort and its suspension copes with most hits. Sport mode sharpens steering and response, but not in a manner to disrupt the drive serenity.

The CLE 200 cruises in ninth gear at a barely-there 1300rpm, so you really can’t hear the engine. It’s a delight on the highway, and radar cruise control and lane-keep systems are among the least invasive I’ve tested.

This 200’s mild-hybrid engine performance is the weak point. It’ll hit 100km/h in 7.4 seconds, but feels slower and – unless primed – lazy to respond.

Mercedes GLC wows with luxury interiors

The 300’s zestier power plant dops the sprint to 6.2 seconds, and is unquestionably the keener driver’s pick. It rides better than the 200, and all-wheel-drive makes corner-carving traction more enjoyable.

But all CLEs are at their best as long-distance cruisers, making the far cheaper but very well-equipped 200 the smart money choice for most.

Our test returned 8.2L/100km (200) and 10.9L/100km (300), while servicing’s a wallet-testing $6800 for five years.

2024 Mercedes-Benz CLE Convertible. Photo: Supplied
2024 Mercedes-Benz CLE Convertible. Photo: Supplied

VERDICT

Four stars

Serene to drive and elegant to behold, Mercedes proves it never lost the knack of delivering desirable two-doors, albeit for a chunky price.

2024 Mercedes-Benz CLE 200 and 300 VITALS

PRICE From about $111,000 drive-away

WARRANTY/SERVICE Five years/unlimited km, $6800 for five years/125,000km plan

SAFETY 10 airbags, auto emergency braking, 360-degree camera, lane-keep assist, brake assist, blind-spot monitor, adaptive cruise, traffic-sign recognition

POWER 2.0-litre four-cyl turbo petrol, 150kW/320Nm (200), 190kW/400Nm (300)

ECONOMY 7.2L-7.7L/100km

SPARE Repair kit

LUGGAGE 420 litres (385 litres Cabrio)

Originally published as Mercedes-Benz CLE Coupe and Convertible review

Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/motoring/new-cars/mercedesbenz-cle-coupe-and-convertible-review/news-story/1d60dcd78aafe3fd9e69a8bcc66dfea8