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2021 (21) MINI Hatchback 2.0 Cooper S Sport 5dr

10 people shortlisted this car

Located at Dunfermline Fiat

Only £18,998
£249 Deposit
£337.87 Per month

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Featured specification

Standard specification

Driver Convenience

Automatic start/stop function with brake energy recuperationCompatible mobile phone bluetooth with audio streaming
Cruise control with brake assistDigital instrument cluster
Electro-mechanical speed dependant steering assistanceMINI Driving Modes - centre toggle switch to control driving setting (sport, mid and green)
Mini E-callMINI TeleServices
On board computerRear park distance control
Service interval indicator 

Engine/Drivetrain/Suspension

6 Speed manual transmission including gear change indicator displayAdaptive suspension
Double Vanos systemFully variable valve control
High precision injectionPerformance Control

Entertainment

8.8" touchscreen with LED ringFM tuner and DAB digital radio

Exterior Features

Automatic headlight activation switchBonnet scoop
Dynamic brake lightsElectric front+rear windows
Heated rear windowHeated windscreen washer jets
JCW Aerodynamic kit - Front and rear bumpers with sporty JCW styling and part-painted side sills with MINI John Cooper Works door sill finishersJohn Cooper Works rear spoiler
LED headlight with closed ring and daytime driving lightsMetal door sill strips with Cooper S imprint
Model logo Cooper S on right of tailgateRadiator grille chrome border with honeycomb structure including S Badge
Rain sensor window wipersRear fog lights
Rear LED lights with union jack designRear window wiper
Side scuttle panel with integrated indicatorSun/heat protection glass
White indicator lenses 

Interior Features

12V Accessory socket in centre console4 lashing eyes in luggage compartment
60/40 split folding rear seatAnthracite headliner including grab handles and clothes hooks
Carbon black colour line - Knee roll and door armrestChrome interior highlights
CupholdersFront and rear head restraints
Front and rear isofix with front passenger airbag deactivationGlove compartment
Height and length steering column adjustmentInterior lighting with 12 basic colours selectable via toggle switch in roof
JCW Sport seats with integrated headrests, adjustable thigh support and John Cooper Works logoJohn Cooper Works Logo in seat
Leatherette gearshift lever and handbrake gaitersLED reading lights, vanity mirror lights, front foot well light and spotlight on front seats
Manual air conditioningMechanical seat adjustment - forward/back & backrest for front seats and driver seat height adjust
Multifunction steering wheelSport leather steering wheel with speed limiter and audio/communication controls
Storage compartments in doorsStorage pocket on back of front seats
Sunvisors with vanity mirrorsTool kit
Velour floor matsWalknappa leather steering wheel with grey seam and John Cooper Works badge on Piano Black lower steering wheel spoke

Packs

Piano black exterior pack - Mini Hatchback Cooper S 

Passive Safety

3 point seatbelts on all five seats6 Airbags - front, side, head and seat belt tensioners
Anti-lock braking system (ABS)DSC - Dynamic Stability Control
Front and rear disc brakesHill start assist
Two tone hornTyre pressure monitoring system

Security

Alarm system with tilt sensor, monitoring doors, bonnet interior and tailgateElectronic vehicle immobiliser
Start/stop toggle with keyless go 

Trim

Piano black interior trim
The vehicle information above was correct at time of manufacture. Please speak to the dealership for full current specification.

Technical specification

Emissions - ICE

Standard Euro EmissionsEURO 6WLTP - CO2 (g/km) - Comb146
WLTP - CO2 (g/km) - Comb - TEH151WLTP - CO2 (g/km) - Comb - TEL141
WLTP - CO2 (g/km) - Extra High145WLTP - CO2 (g/km) - Extra High - TEH151
WLTP - CO2 (g/km) - Extra High - TEL136WLTP - CO2 (g/km) - High127
WLTP - CO2 (g/km) - High - TEH132WLTP - CO2 (g/km) - High - TEL124
WLTP - CO2 (g/km) - Low200WLTP - CO2 (g/km) - Low - TEH203
WLTP - CO2 (g/km) - Low - TEL199WLTP - CO2 (g/km) - Medium140
WLTP - CO2 (g/km) - Medium - TEH145WLTP - CO2 (g/km) - Medium - TEL138

Engine and Drive Train

CamshaftDOHCCatalytic ConvertorTrue
CC1998Compression Ratio11.0:1
Cylinder LayoutIN-LINECylinders4
Cylinders - Bore (mm)82Cylinders - Stroke (mm)94.6
Engine CodeB48A20M1Engine LayoutFRONT TRANSVERSE
Fuel DeliveryTURBO INJECTIONGears6 SPEED
Number of Valves16TransmissionMANUAL

Fuel Consumption - ICE

WLTP - FC (l/100km) - Comb6.4WLTP - FC (l/100km) - Comb - TEH6.6
WLTP - FC (l/100km) - Comb - TEL6.2WLTP - FC (l/100km) - Extra High6.4
WLTP - FC (l/100km) - Extra High - TEH6.6WLTP - FC (l/100km) - Extra High - TEL6
WLTP - FC (l/100km) - High5.6WLTP - FC (l/100km) - High - TEH6.6
WLTP - FC (l/100km) - High - TEL5.4WLTP - FC (l/100km) - Low8.8
WLTP - FC (l/100km) - Low - TEH8.9WLTP - FC (l/100km) - Low - TEL8.8
WLTP - FC (l/100km) - Medium6.2WLTP - FC (l/100km) - Medium - TEH6.4
WLTP - FC (l/100km) - Medium - TEL6.1WLTP - MPG - Comb44.1
WLTP - MPG - Comb - TEH42.8WLTP - MPG - Comb - TEL45.6
WLTP - MPG - Extra High44.1WLTP - MPG - Extra High - TEH42.8
WLTP - MPG - Extra High - TEL47.1WLTP - MPG - High50.4
WLTP - MPG - High - TEH42.8WLTP - MPG - High - TEL52.3
WLTP - MPG - Low32.1WLTP - MPG - Low - TEH31.7
WLTP - MPG - Low - TEL32.1WLTP - MPG - Medium45.6
WLTP - MPG - Medium - TEH44.1WLTP - MPG - Medium - TEL46.3

General

Badge Engine CC2.0Badge Power178
Coin SeriesCooper S SportGeneration Mark3
Insurance Group 1 - 50 Effective January 0725EManufacturers Corrosion Perforation Guarantee - Years12
Manufacturers Paintwork Guarantee - Years3Service Interval Frequency - Months24
Service Interval Mileage15000Vehicle Homologation ClassM1

Performance

0 to 62 mph (secs)6.8Engine Power - BHP178
Engine Power - KW141Engine Power - PSTrue
Engine Power - RPM5000Engine Torque - LBS.FT207
Engine Torque - MKG28.6Engine Torque - NM280
Engine Torque - RPM1350Top Speed146

Test Cycles

Emissions Test CycleWLTPRDE Certification LevelRDE 2

Tyres

Alloys?TrueTyre Size Front205/45 R17
Tyre Size Rear205/45 R17Tyre Size SpareTYRE REPAIR KIT
Wheel StyleTRACK SPOKEWheel Type17" ALLOY

Vehicle Dimensions

Height1425Length4036
Wheelbase2567Width1727
Width (including mirrors)1928 

Weight and Capacities

Fuel Tank Capacity (Litres)44Gross Vehicle Weight1755
Luggage Capacity (Seats Down)941Luggage Capacity (Seats Up)278
Max. Loading Weight490Max. Roof Load75
Minimum Kerbweight1265No. of Seats5
Turning Circle - Kerb to Kerb11.1
The vehicle information above was correct at time of manufacture. Please speak to the dealership for full current specification.

Independent review

Review courtesy of Car and Driving

MINI Hatch Cooper S

By Jonathan Crouch

Introduction

Originally launched in 2014, the third generation F56/F55 version of the 3 and 5 Door MINI Cooper S Hatch got a useful mid-term update in 2018 to create the car we're going to look at here. In this form, it became smarter and more sophisticated - and could be more individual too. It remained a properly credible hot hatch and its harder-hitting 2.0-litre engine and talented chassis deliver plenty of fun as you power to 62mph in 6.8 seconds to the tune of a blissfully cheeky exhaust note. In this post-2018-era guise, this hot hatch became a more mature thing too, better built than many of its rivals and with sophisticated safety and media connectivity. In short, in this facelifted form, this F56/F55 design came of age. Let's check it out as a used buy.

History

The MINI Cooper S has long been an exercise in artful compromise, looking to occupy that sweet spot between the warm-ish Cooper and the wild race-inspired John Cooper Works model. As a result, it's often been the best pick for those who aren't likely to subject their car to a race circuit and instead just want a MINI that's entertainingly quick without incurring huge running costs in the process. That formula didn't change too much with the improved post-2018-era version of the third F66/F65 generation three or five-door model, but what lay beneath the skin did. Under the bonnet, you'll find a 2.0-litre turbocharged engine that was revised over the original version of this unit fitted to this model and in this form put out a 192bhp output and featured a redesigned turbocharger. More importantly perhaps, this was a bigger, better finished car than before, yet one still well priced against comparably performing hot hatch rivals like Ford's Fiesta ST and the Volkswagen Polo GTI. As part of this update, the optional Steptronic auto gearbox now had seven speeds; there was a whole fresh level of connectivity via upgraded 'MINI Connected' services. And the brand introduced a 'MINI Yours Customised' programme that set a fresh industry standard for the level to which buyers could personalise their cars. Plus this MINI could be lighter, it was better equipped and it could now come with a wider range of options. A further update followed in 2021, lasting the F56/F55 design through to the end of production and the end of sales in early 2024.

What You Get

The MK3 Cooper S came in either the F56 3-Door Hatch body shape or an F55-series 5-Door Hatch form. Established MINI styling cues are present and correct - the clamshell bonnet, the upright windscreen and yes, the round headlamps - though as part of the 2018 facelift, quite a lot of work went into enhancing these with this revised Hatch model. The improved lights may look much the same as those of the pre-facelift model, but the full-LED technology behind them is very different, particularly if you get a car whose original owner ordered the optional 'Matrix' adaptive beams that automatically extinguish parts of the lamp that might dazzle other road users. Either way, a redesigned LED daytime running light ring surrounds the beam and illuminates as a turn signal when needed. Other 2018 update changes included a revised range of alloy wheel designs that vary in size depending on the trim level of the car chosen - 15 or 16-inch rims for the base 'Classic' models and 17-inchers if you choose a model fitted with plusher 'Sport' or 'Exclusive'-spec. 'Sport'-spec gets you a John Cooper Works aerodynamic body kit. The dinky, power-packed profile came with either a body-coloured, a white or a black roof, all colour options featuring matching mirror housings. Get behind the wheel and it's all quite BMW-like. If you've driven the pre-facelift F56/F55 model, you'll know that the huge central display doesn't function as a speedo in the way that it did with earlier MINI Hatches. Less characterfully but more practically, the speedo here was re-located to a pod in front of the steering wheel where it's flanked with a crescent-moon rev counter and fuel gauge. All of this freed the central area up for much more infotainical trickery. By 2018, the screen was 6.5-inches in size across the range as standard and could be upgraded from new to 8.8-inches in size as part of the 'Navigation Plus Pack' which included all the latest 'MINI Connected' media features. In the back, legroom remains very cramped indeed if there's an adult of more than average height in front of you. If that's going to be an issue, the five-door version of this car (which gets an extra 72mm of length between the front are rear wheels) will obviously suit you better. What is quite impressive, even in the 3 Door model, is the amount of head and elbow room you get. In the back, there's a 311-litre boot. With everything flat, a surprisingly large 731-litre load capacity area reveals itself.

What to Look For

There aren't many reported issues with this F56/F55-series MINI Cooper S Hatch mechanically. We came across a few cars experiencing the odd clutch issue. The torque of the engine seems to be part of the problem, but some owners have reported that their clutch is slipping quite early in the car's life. Even then, it wasn't that straightforward. Apparently, the on-board sensor designed to be an early-warning system of clutch failure proved in some cases to be just too sensitive for its own good, throwing up a false warnings on the dashboard when there was actually no problem at all. Dealerships have tackled this by taking any car in question out on to the road and performing a series of full-throttle acceleration tests in both second and fourth gear. Any clutch slip meant a new clutch was needed, but if there was no slip, the software was recalibrated to prevent the false alarms. Either way, the acceleration test is one you should perform when test-driving any Cooper S with a manual gearbox. The other thing to watch is for a car that has had skipped oil changes. Check the service handbook for any missed scheduled services and ensure the oil on the dipstick is relatively clean. The problem with skipped oil changes is most likely to show up in the variable valve-timing system these engines use, and dirty oil will foul the small oilways and filters quick smart. At which point, it's a pricey, expensive fix.

Replacement Parts

(approx based on a 2019 MINI Cooper S excl. VAT - autopartspro.co.uk) A front brake pad set costs in the £23-£33 bracket. A rear pad set is in the £15-£33 bracket. Front brake discs start in the £24-£54 bracket - it's around £22-£54 for a rear one. Oil filters cost in the £3-£17 bracket. A fuel filter costs between £2 and £24. An air filter is between £11-£16. A cabin filter is in the £11-£30 bracket.

On the Road

So. What's it like? Slip behind the wheel and at first glance, you're reminded that for all its cheeky marketing, the MINI Hatch was quite a lot more mature in this F56/F55 form. The dashboard's smart, the materials used are classy and you aren't faced with too many obvious attention-seeking gimmicks. Flip the neat starter switch in the middle of the row of toggle controls at the bottom of the centre stack and first impressions are good. This post-2018-era Cooper S offered 2.0-litre four cylinder power and this unit has a bit of an urgent rasp to it. Can a bigger MINI really feel like a proper MINI should? Fun, frisky - up for anything? This is important, given that a large part of this car's appeal stands or falls on its involving driving experience. Yes, people love the styling and the image, but one of these just has to put a smile on your face when you drive it. If the overall feeling you're going to get is of just another supermini wearing a cute suit, you'd have to question this car's place in the overall scheme of things. Under the skin, this car shared the same so-called 'UKL' platform and basically the same engines as virtually all of BMW's smaller volume models made at the end of this century's second decade. Does that mean a loss of unique 'MINI-ness'? The answer is no, not really. Driving this car still delivers same infectious naughtiness that loyal MINI followers love so much. There's still the darty steering and quick-fire throttle response you'd expect. And, yes, on pokier versions (or on variants unwisely fitted with over-large wheels), still the same unyieldingly bumpy ride over poor surfaces. We'll get to that in a minute, but first you might be wanting to know about the mechanical updates made to this facelifted F56/F55-series model. As part of the 2018 model update, there was a fundamental overhaul of the 2.0-litre four cylinder powerplant that features in a 192hp state of tune in this top Cooper S hot hatch variant, which in this form got a high pressure injector, a re-designed exhaust system and a fresh turbocharger. Arguably even more significant than all this was the introduction of a new 7-speed Steptronic double clutch auto gearbox option, replacing the previous lower-tech torque converter 6-speeder. On this Cooper S, original buyers could specify that Steptronic transmission paired up with steering wheel shift paddles and if you're quick with them, 62mph from rest can be dispatched in just 6.8s (a tenth faster than the manual model) on the way to a maximum of 146mph. Only if you're one of those people who likes to rev up to the red line and wring all the performance out of your hot hatch might you be disappointed. The four cylinder 2.0-litre powerplant - like the Cooper's lesser three cylinder unit - has pretty much delivered all its punch by around 5,500rpm, so instead for really rapid progress, you've to learn to lean on the engine's slug of turbocharged torque. On a Cooper S, this performance is accompanied by noise enhancement through the stereo speakers. Normally, we prefer aural excitement to come more naturally, either through the exhaust or from under the bonnet, but in this case, the more artificial set-up actually works quite well. And ride quality? Well some 'Sport'-trimmed models were fitted with optional stiffer Sport suspension. We'd avoid these, particularly given that a 'Sport'-spec model will come fitted with large 17-inch wheels. In our view, the very last thing this MINI needs in any of its guises is a set of unyielding springs. This F56/F55-series model's UKL platform allowed for a suspension design that actually gives entry-level variants on standard 15-inch wheels a very reasonable ride, but if you get a car specified with the larger rims that many customers tend to want, you can quickly end up with a car that on really poor bumpy surfaces delivers all the suspensional compliance of a Halfords trolley jack. Original buyers could do something about that when specifying this car by ticking the box for the Variable Damper Control set-up. This enables you to switch the ride to suit the mood you're in and the road you're on and it works through the (also optional) 'MINI Driving Modes' system. This set-up, activated on this facelifted model via a toggle switch on the centre stack, enables you to choose settings that tweak throttle, steering and (on automatic models) gear change response between 'MID' and 'Green' settings for efficient, comfort-orientated motoring. You'll want the third mode option, 'Sport', when the road opens up and the red mist begins to fall, something echoed appropriately by a red glow around the central display and, less subtly, by a little picture of a go-kart and the phrase 'maximum go kart feel'. Quite. A 'Configure Sport' option on the centre screen allows you to select or de-select a 'Sport' response from either the drivetrain or the chassis, if you want to tailor things specifically. If all that's of interest, then you'll be thankful for the brand's 'Performance Control' torque vectoring system that was standard on the Cooper S. 'Performance Control' electronically duplicates the kind of functionality you'd normally get from a heavier, more complicated mechanical locking differential, working through the turns to counter both understeer and wheel spin by lightly micro-braking whichever front wheel is threatening to lose grip. As a result, the car's kept planted through the tightest corner and you're fired on from bend to bend. What else? Well in a car like this, the manual gearbox should be satisfying to use and snikerty-quick; disappointingly, this one isn't, with a notchy feel and a long-ish throw. Still, at least the clutch is light, which helps in town. And on this Cooper S, there's clever rev-matching software that even instructs the engine to blip the throttle on down-changes, so it sounds as if you've mastered the perfect heel and toe technique and your friends will think you're the next Lewis Hamilton.

Overall

We can all argue about whether the F56/F55 generation Cooper S is as pretty a car as its predecessors, but there can be no doubt that it was a better all-rounder. Compared to its predecessors, it was more spacious, better built, featured some fascinating technical features and seemed to have been engineered to offer more driving fun on one hand and lower bills on the other. Just make sure you get the right spec. Ideally, you'll need to find a car whose original owner spent extra on the Driving Modes system and the Variable damping. And you'll ideally need to try and avoid being tempted by examples fitted with the larger wheels that bring a crashy ride - and automatic gearboxes that detract from the connected feel. Yes, you could pay the same kind of money and buy a more conventional supermini-based hot hatch from this era. Perhaps the purer, more focused Fiesta ST. Or the more comfortable and relaxing Volkswagen Polo GTI. This F56/F55 Cooper S though, arguably delivers an appealing compromise between the two - and feels much more special while it's doing it. It's a MINI to the max. And that's always a tempting thing.

Performance
70%
Handling
70%
Comfort
70%
Space
60%
Styling
70%
Build
80%
Value
70%
Equipment
70%
Economy
70%
Depreciation
80%
Insurance
70%

* Depending on the age of the vehicle, MPG and CO2 may be quoted using either NEDC or WLTP testing standards.  Find out more

Figures are provided for comparison purposes. Fuel consumption under real world driving conditions and the CO2 produced will depend upon a number of factors, including any accessories fitted after registration, variations in driving styles, weather conditions and vehicle load.

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These are estimates and could change if you decide to apply for finance. Car finance explained.

Personal contract purchase (PCP)

This is an example, we’ll always discuss your options in detail before you choose.

47 monthly payments of£337.87
Deposit£249
Total amount payable£24,845.89
Fixed interest rate5.6%
Representative APR10.9%
Cash price£18,998
Credit amount£18,749
Annual mileage8000
Contract mileage32,000
Excess mileage charge15.0p per mile
Completion fee£1
Optional final payment£8716
Term (months)48

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Dunfermline Fiat

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