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Home Showroom Mazda

Mazda previews next-gen city car with Vision X-Compact concept 

by Kyle Cassidy
October 30, 2025
Mazda Vision X compact in red

Mazda has revealed a new city-sized crossover concept, the Vision X-Compact, at the Japan Mobility Show, previewing the brand’s next generation of small cars and hinting at future replacements for the Mazda2 hatch and CX-3 SUV. 

Unveiled alongside the rotary-powered Vision X-Coupe, the X-Compact embodies Mazda’s show theme, “The Joy of Driving Fuels a Sustainable Tomorrow,” and represents a more humanised, tech-savvy approach to urban mobility. Mazda says the car was designed to “deepen the bond between people and cars through empathetic AI.” 

Described as “your simple and compact best friend,” the Vision X-Compact explores how artificial intelligence could make vehicles more intuitive companions rather than just transport tools. The concept’s onboard AI can hold natural conversations with the driver, suggest destinations, and adapt to moods or habits.

They say it’s a digital evolution of Mazda’s long-standing Jinba Ittai (“horse and rider as one”) philosophy. Let’s just hope the AI doesn’t start hallucinating and encourage the driver to go on a Grand Theft Auto style crime spree across town.   

In keeping with Mazda’s Kodo design language, the X-Compact features organic looking bodywork and a ‘friendly’, purposeful stance. Despite its small footprint which at 3825mm long and 1795mm wide, makes it shorter than both the current Mazda2 and CX-3 but slightly wider than either, the proportions strike a balance between hatchback and crossover. 

The interior follows a minimalist, airy layout with four doors and a driver-focused cockpit. Mazda hasn’t confirmed what powers the concept, but the presence of a tachometer behind the steering wheel suggests a petrol or hybrid drivetrain rather than a fully electric setup. 
Mazda says the X-Compact represents the next step in its “Radically Human” design philosophy, where technology enhances emotion rather than replaces it. The goal is to create vehicles that feel alive; ‘machines that understand their drivers and make daily life more enjoyable’.  

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