For 2025, Mini is overhauling the iconic Cooper hatchback, keeping the classic front end but mixing it up with trapezoidal taillights and a fresh new dashboard design. While we had previously only seen the three-door variant, Mini is now showing off the 2025 Cooper five-door, which arrives this year in Cooper S guise.
Measuring 158.9 inches from nose to tail, the five-door model is roughly six inches longer than its three-door counterpart and nearly the same size as the outgoing five-door variant. The wheelbase grows by 2.8 inches, giving the five passengers inside more legroom. Stylistically, the five-door model looks identical to the three-door, with the cutesy round headlights and balanced stance, albeit with an extra set of doors. Plus, 16- and 18-inch wheels will be offered.
The cabin also looks the same, with interesting textiles covering the dashboard and a large circular infotainment screen in the center. The simple interior design means there is no gauge cluster, although a head-up display will be offered and the infotainment system will also respond to voice commands. The rear seats fold down to provide extra cabin space.
While the Cooper will offer a three-cylinder engine producing 154 horsepower in other parts of the world, all U.S.-bound five-door Coopers will come with four-cylinder engines. The Cooper S arrives first with a turbocharged inline-four that routes 201 horsepower and 221 pound-feet of torque through a seven-speed automatic gearbox. Later, Mini will add a Cooper C model with a 2.0-liter four-cylinder, with horsepower and torque figures set to be revealed closer to launch.
Production of the five-door Cooper kicks off this July, with the Cooper S reaching dealers in September. The base-model five-door Coopers, meanwhile, will go on sale in the U.S. in January 2025. The Cooper S five-door will start at $34,195, while pricing of the Cooper C will be announced later.