Skip advert
Advertisement

Honda N-One review

We drive the Japan-only Honda N-One in Tokyo to see how it compares to our European city cars

Overall Auto Express rating

3.0

How we review cars
Find your Honda N-One
Compare deals from trusted partners on this car and previous models.
Or are you looking to sell your car?
Value my car
Fast, no-nonsense car selling
Value my car

Confined to the city, the Honda N-One, or any ‘Kei’ car for that matter, makes a decent job as an urban runabout. It doesn’t match the standards set by European alternatives, however, so would unlikely win favour with buyers over here. It’s difficult not to be attracted by its quirky charm, though.

Advertisement - Article continues below

This dinky little contraption is a Honda N-One, a Japanese ‘Kei’ car designed for life in one of the world’s most congested cities. Kei cars launched in Japan back in the 1940s as a way of getting the country mobile on the cheap, following World War II.

The idea quickly caught on, and Kei cars today account for almost a third of the country’s new car sales. Unless you live in Japan, these types of vehicles are almost impossible to get your hands on – so are we being deprived of a quirky city runabout?

Best city cars 2017

If there’s any Kei car that will meet demanding European tastes it’s the Honda N-One. Kitted out with a reversing camera, hill start assist, touchscreen sat-nav and a raft of safety kit, you can think of it as the Mercedes S-Class of the Kei car world.

Visually, there’s no denying its cutesy image and odd proportions will win favour with style conscious European buyers, but inside it falls rather short of matching rivals such as the VW up! for style, space, quality, technology or practicality. The list goes on.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Used - available now

M135i

2024 BMW

M135i

22,972 milesAutomaticPetrol2.0L

Cash £23,997
View M135i
3 Series

2022 BMW

3 Series

74,499 milesAutomaticPetrol2.0L

Cash £17,476
View 3 Series
Taigo

2025 Volkswagen

Taigo

32,502 milesAutomaticPetrol1.5L

Cash £18,400
View Taigo
Tucson

2023 Hyundai

Tucson

19,828 milesManualPetrol1.6L

Cash £18,500
View Tucson

Find yourself in the back and there’s more head and legroom than you’d initially think possible; you really can fit four adults in it relatively comfortably. That space, however, has come at the expense of boot capacity – there’s room for a briefcase at a push.  

Advertisement - Article continues below

It’s powered by a 660cc three-cylinder turbocharged engine, which kicks out just 54bhp and 104Nm of torque. That doesn’t sound like much, but in a car that weighs around 800kg it certainly feels enough. Pin the throttle and the N-One scampers off the line, accompanied by the enthusiastic thrum of the three-cylinder engine.  

Power is sent to the front-wheels (four-wheel drive models are also available) via a CVT automatic gearbox. That means any attempt to pick up the pace on the move sees the revs soar dramatically, with the wheezy engine struggling to turn that into any sort of momentum. Having said that, hitting speeds above 30mph in Tokyo is a rare experience.

However, it’s in cities like this that Kei cars come into their own. Their tiny dimensions allow you to nip your way through dawdling traffic, slipping past ignorant taxi drivers and squeezing between crowded buses. Nothing else gets you across a city like a Kei car does – expect a motorbike, or indeed, the subway.

Ride quality is decent enough, but the steering is vague and light. At low speeds it’s not so troublesome but on the expressway and on faster sweeping roads it’s a bit of a guessing game as to how much lock you have to apply to the steering to reach your desired direction.

Given its flaws and compromises you’d expect that to be reflected in the price tag. But the N-One will set you back around 1.8m Yen in Japan, which equates to about £11,000. 

Skip advert
Advertisement

More reviews

New & used car deals

Kia Sportage

Kia Sportage

RRP £28,065Avg. savings £2,773 off RRP*Used from £14,995
Volkswagen Tiguan

Volkswagen Tiguan

RRP £35,385Avg. savings £2,919 off RRP*Used from £14,850
Renault Clio

Renault Clio

RRP £16,160Avg. savings £2,825 off RRP*Used from £8,600
MG MG4

MG MG4

RRP £26,995Avg. savings £6,040 off RRP*Used from £12,495
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

New Volvo EM90 2025 review: the ultimate SUV killer
Volvo EM90 - front

New Volvo EM90 2025 review: the ultimate SUV killer

Volvo has made an ultra-luxurious van. Intrigued? You should be, but sadly it’s for China only
Road tests
20 Jun 2025
Groundbreaking Nissan solid-state EV batteries due on sale by 2028
Nissan Leaf - front cornering

Groundbreaking Nissan solid-state EV batteries due on sale by 2028

The industry is in a race to bring solid-state to the market, and Nissan isn’t too far behind the leaders
News
17 Jun 2025
Toyota GR Corolla hot hatch is on the way to the UK
Toyota GR Corolla - front cornering

Toyota GR Corolla hot hatch is on the way to the UK

The success of the GR Yaris has persuaded Toyota that there’s room in its UK range for the high performance Corolla
News
19 Jun 2025