Ford has given the Puma Gen-E a sharper brief for 2026. The update pushes WLTP range to 417 km, adds BlueCruise hands-free motorway driving, and drops the Danish starting price to about $32,909. That combination matters because the small electric crossover class punishes half-measures. Buyers want low running costs, credible motorway range, and tech that feels current, not borrowed from a cheaper trim sheet.
Looking at the data, Ford now attacks the class from the value side instead of trying to win with badge pull alone. The Puma Gen-E still uses a front-mounted 123 kW electric motor with 290 Nm, but the revised battery setup lifts official range from 376 km to 417 km while keeping energy use at a class-strong 13.1 kWh/100 km in Select trim. Ford also keeps DC charging competitive, with a 10-80% charge time of 24 minutes on a 100 kW charger. That is the kind of spec sheet that works in dense European traffic and on longer A-road runs.
Ford Puma Gen-E key specs and pricing
| Metric | Ford Puma Gen-E Select | Ford Puma Gen-E Premium | Ford Puma Gen-E Sound Edition |
|---|---|---|---|
| Power | 168 PS / 123 kW | 168 PS / 123 kW | 168 PS / 123 kW |
| Torque | 290 Nm | 290 Nm | 290 Nm |
| Usable battery | 43 kWh | 43 kWh | 43 kWh |
| WLTP range | 233 mi / 375 km in 2025 UK list, now 417 km update for 2026 EU release | 226 mi / 364 km in prior UK list | 224 mi / 360 km in prior UK list |
| Energy use | 13.1 kWh/100 km | 13.7 kWh/100 km | 13.8 kWh/100 km |
| DC fast charge | 10-80% in 24 min | 10-80% in 24 min | 10-80% in 24 min |
| 0-62 mph | 8.0 sec | 8.0 sec | 8.0 sec |
| Top speed | 99 mph / 159 km/h | 99 mph / 159 km/h | 99 mph / 159 km/h |
| Denmark starting price | $32,909 | n/a | n/a |
| UK OTR price | £29,995 / about $40,327 | £31,995 / about $43,016 | £34,295 / about $46,108 |
Why the 2026 update matters
The battery change does not turn the Puma Gen-E into a long-haul giant. It does something smarter. It closes the gap that used to make the car look like a city-biased EV with limited motorway confidence. In addition, Ford now brings BlueCruise to its smallest European passenger vehicle, giving the Puma the same hands-off, eyes-on motorway capability already used in larger and pricier Ford models across 16 European markets and more than 135,000 km of approved Blue Zones.
From an expert perspective, that is a class signal. Ford wants buyers to view the Puma Gen-E as a premium-tech small crossover, not merely an electrified Puma. That logic also explains the richer B&O audio upgrade to 650 W, broader connectivity offers, and the new BlueCruise Edition, which bundles the driving tech without forcing buyers into a rolling subscription debate.
Packaging still does real work
Small electric crossovers often lose practicality once the battery goes in. Ford has handled that issue better than many rivals. The Puma Gen-E offers a 43-litre front trunk and up to 566 litres of combined storage with the rear load area and Gigabox. That gives it a real-use edge for urban families, airport runs, and weekly shopping, where load shape matters as much as headline litres.
Dimensionally, the Puma remains compact enough for old European streets. The regular Puma platform sits at about 4,207 mm long, 1,805 mm wide without mirrors, and 1,537 mm high. That footprint sits in the sweet spot for buyers moving out of a supermini without wanting a larger C-segment EV.
Pro-Tip
If you drive mostly in town, focus on energy use and storage design before you chase battery size. A lighter, more efficient EV with better packaging often saves more time and money than a heavier rival with a slightly bigger pack.
Ford Puma Gen-E vs direct rivals
| Model | Power | Torque | Battery usable/net | WLTP range | DC charge | Starting price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ford Puma Gen-E | 168 PS | 290 Nm | 43 kWh usable | 417 km | 24 min, 10-80% | $32,909 in Denmark |
| Jeep Avenger Electric | 156 PS | 260 Nm | 51 kWh net | 385-400 km | 27-30 min | about £29,999 / $40,333 |
| Opel Mokka Electric Griffin | 156 PS | n/a | n/a | 247 miles / 398 km | n/a | about £31,005 / $41,684 after UK grant |
| Peugeot E-2008 | n/a | n/a | 54 kWh gross class | 227-247 miles / 365-398 km | n/a | market pricing typically above Puma Gen-E entry level |
By comparison, the Jeep Avenger Electric stays close on price and range, but Ford answers with more torque and quicker charging. The Opel Mokka Electric matches the mainstream power figure and roughly tracks range, yet the Puma counters with stronger storage packaging and a lower Danish entry point. The Peugeot E-2008 still sells on style and cabin feel, though Ford now looks harder to ignore on efficiency-per-dollar.