Alfa Romeo Stelvio Showroom

Alfa Romeo Stelvio

$ 77,950 - $ 175,200* MRLP

The Alfa Romeo Stelvio is an Italian luxury SUV which competes in the medium luxury SUV segment along with cars such as the Mercedes-Benz GLC and BMW X3. It comes with a number of powertrains which send power to all wheels through an automatic transmission.

Latest Alfa Romeo Stelvio ratings breakdown

7.5

Performance
8.0
Safety Technology
7.0
Ride Quality
7.0
Infotainment & Connectivity
7.0
Handling & Dynamics
8.5
Energy Efficiency
7.0
Driver Technology
8.0
Value for Money
8.0
Interior Comfort & Packaging
7.0
Fit for Purpose
7.5
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What we love

  • -Head-turning looks
  • -Taut and communicative steering
  • -More affordable than rivals
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What we don't

  • -Tight rear seats
  • -Compromised comfort on rough surfaces
  • -Prices are creeping up
2024 Alfa Romeo Stelvio Veloce review
Review | 17 Mar 2024

7.5

2021 Alfa Romeo Stelvio Veloce review
Review | 6 Oct 2021

7.8

Sporty Italian flair with enough room to fit in the family and groceries. Does Alfa's medium SUV make a compelling option among premium SUVs?
2021 Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio review
Review | 28 Sep 2021

8.2

Active safety and interior updates make the new Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio a more appealing performance SUV, as Glenn Butler discovers.
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2019 Alfa Romeo Stelvio Ti review
Review | 6 Sep 2020

7.8

As a city-dwelling everyday car, this SUV with an Italian attitude may not be entirely functional, but it sure is fun.

Alfa Romeo Stelvio Price*

YearVariantPrice
2023Alfa Romeo Stelvio Ti 2.0L SUV 4WD$77,950
2023Alfa Romeo Stelvio Veloce 2.0L SUV 4WD$84,450
2023Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio 2.9L SUV 4WD$162,700
2023Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio 100th Anniversario 2.9L SUV 4WD$175,200

Alfa Romeo Stelvio Specs:

Variant (1 available)
alfa-stelvio
Price
$77,950*
FuelType
Petrol
Transmission
Auto
Drive Type
4WD
Engine
2.0T
Fuel Efficiency
7L / 100km
Seats
5
Towing braked
2300 kg
Towing unbraked
750 kg
Variant (1 available)
Select Variant (2 available)

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Alfa Romeo Stelvio Videos

Alfa Romeo Stelvio Dimensions

The Alfa Romeo Stelvio has 4 variants. The height ranges from 1648mm to 1689mm, the width ranges from 1903mm to 1955mm and length is between 4687mm and 4702mm:

HeightWidthLength
From1648mm1903mm4687mm
To1689mm1955mm4702mm

How safe is the Alfa Romeo Stelvio?

ANCAP rating

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2018 Alfa Romeo Stelvio First Edition review
Owner Review | 16 Sep 2018
1983 was the final year of my schooling in a large country town. It was a year with highs and lows. I can remember watching Australia winning the Americas cup at school whilst we all sung the new national anthem ‘Down Under’ in unison by Men at Work. In 1983 I asked the new girl out to the flashy twin cinema in my father’s old car. A 1966 220S Mercedes. I had two choices – Gandhi or Scarface. Both possibly the worst date movies ever made. I’m sure Pacino shouting “Say hello to my little friend” would not have ranked highly on the date-o-meter. We saw Gandhi. The movie went for about 100 hours. My father’s car broke down on the way back home. That car always broke down. We walked. It rained. A low. In 1983 very few of us had computers. I had a mate with a Tandy TSR-80 with an incredible 48kb of pure power. Mobile phones & course the internet didn’t exist. V8’s ruled although none of us could afford one. Turbo’s only existed in Saab’s. No such things as all the modern niceties. No information displays, cup holders, heads up displays, Sat Nav or Apple car play. All we cared about was how the car drove. In 1983 the best driver at school was a mate who used to do perfect handbrake turns in the Teachers carpark in his bright red Ford Capri every morning before exiting in a cloud of smoke. The quiet bloke with the Capri, Anthony, had been honing his hoon skills on the family paddock in an old mini probably since he was old enough to walk. I lost contact with Anthony long ago. Since then I’ve been an absolute car tragic. Due to a very short attention space I’ve had some zillion different cars over the years. In fact, at last count I’ve had 5 BMW’S, 3 Audi’s, 3 Porsches, 2 Skoda’s, 2 Lexi, 3 Nissans, a Merc a Ford a Holden a VW & a Volvo. I’ve probably missed something. And the Volvo doesn’t really count, I gave that to my daughter. Little things that bug me in a car become big things – I’d eventually get annoyed and sell the car. I recently sold a car because the start / stop fuel saving defeat thing was too far from the ignition button. (I’m looking at you Audi A4 Allroad with your fancy dual flashy screens). I once sold an M3 because it bottomed out on a local speed hump. Sold a Lexus after a few weeks – because well – it was a Lexus. I’ve still got 2 Porsches. Wife’s got a Macan Petrol S & I’ve got a manual 987.2 Cayman which I only drive occasionally. Love that car – raw drivers car. The cup holders suck. Not much of an infotainment system on that one. Why would you need anything other than the soundtrack of a screaming mid-engine straight six? I don’t know how many cars my hoon mate from school, Anthony had. I know he had a WRX. He rolled it out of his garage in 2004 and entered it in the Targa Tasmania. The quiet bloke was unknown down there. Porsche 911’s had won the Targa 9 years straight. Jim Richards won 8 of those. Jim finished second in 2004. Anthony won in his WRX. Anthony (now Tony), a battler who couldn’t afford to race the Targa again till 2007. Yep won that one too. I think Tony Sullens is now a factory rally driver for Citroen. Like me he must be getting old. Getting old indeed. I started to look around for an SUV as the next daily driver. I hated SUV’s. But I had two kids, one an L plater and one on red P’s. I needed a safe car they could also drive. I needed one that they could battle other SUV’s with. I needed one that my son could go on surfing trips with that was not ‘p plate’ prohibited. I needed one that drives really well, as I like driving. That last part was going to be difficult – one that’s good to drive. I drove all the usual suspects. They all drove as expected – compromised. Like SUV’s. But they all had plenty of cup holders & fancy infotainment systems that could tell me the temperature in Paris & London. No good to me, I live in Newcastle. Unlike the mates TSR-80 computer in 1983, modern cars now all contain supercomputers. Seemed to me that few are about driving first and foremost. In the main, over time, the emphasis seems more about dulling the driving experience whilst ‘entertaining’ you with the latest gadgets. I stumbled over a lonely Alfa Stelvio at the local mixed bag FCA dealer. They specialised in every brand that nobody else wants. I asked the Mensa trained salesperson whether the solitary Alfa was the petrol or diesel version. He couldn’t tell me. Well that’s a great start. Start it up mate – yep a diesel. Test drove the thing. Hey great steering, handles really really well. Goes well. Stops well. A driver’s SUV – is that possible? Picked up a cheap demo Selvio Diesel from a dealer who was far more passionate about the marque than the last. I purchased a white one. Apparently that was why it was cheap. Yep, ‘White ones won’t have the resale value of a Red Alfa’ he proceeded to tell me after I finalised the deal. Great. He then continued with; ‘97% of Alfas he sold were Red, 2% White and the other 3% everything else’. Geez I’d struck another Mensa candidate. But he was passionate. A driver I suspect. More concerned about handling than cup holders. More concerned about steering than how many things the iPad thingy on the dash could do. Arrived home driving 1100km from the dealer with my newish alfa only to see my Italian heritage wife in the driveway. With a look of dismissive surprise, she proceeded to ask me why isn’t it red? My son then proceeded to mock me about getting an SUV. Fast forward 10,000km and I’m still surprised how good this thing drives. Even my son likes it. Not a single rattle, no bugs or hiccups – none of the infamous unreliability of Alfa’s past. Five years warranty and three years free servicing. Not a bad deal. Recently, Car advice’s own Rob Margeit reviewed the Stelvio. Compared with the 2.0d BMW X3 diesel, the Alfa is faster (6.6 v 8.0). It handles better. Steering is better. So, is economy (4.8 v 5.7). It crash tested better. It looks better. But somehow Rob gave the Alfa lower scores on most of those categories when compared with the BMW X3 2.0d which I found rather confusing. Rob just didn’t get it. He gave it a rather unremarkable 7.3. The soccer mums won’t get it either. Drivers get it. Tony Sullens would get it. I think Tony wouldn’t car less how many cup holders it has. He would give it a 9.0. Alfa deserves better. I think I’ll sell it. I should have got a red one. Long live 1983.
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FAQs

Where is the Alfa Romeo Stelvio made?
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The Alfa Romeo Stelvio is built in Cassino, Italy.

What does the Alfa Romeo Stelvio cost to service?
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Services are required every 12 months/15,000km. Over the first three years, up to 45,000km, those services will cost $894, $1346 and $894 respectively.

Is Alfa Romeo made by Ferrari?
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No, Alfa Romeo Automobiles S.p.A. is an Italian luxury car manufacturer and a subsidiary of Stellantis.

Does the Alfa Romeo Stelvio have a Ferrari engine?
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No, the Alfa Romeo Stelvio doesn't have a Ferrari engine under the hood. The Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio’s Italian-built, Ferrari-derived 2.9-litre bi-turbo V6 is a fire-breathing monster hammering out 375kW and 600Nm, though.

Is the Alfa Romeo Stelvio the same as the Maserati Levante?
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No, but they are closely matched in some areas. The Maserati Levante is a little longer and wider, but the Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio is 0.1sec quicker 0­–100km/h than the Maserati Levante Trofeo for a little more than half the price.

Alfa Romeo Stelvio Deals

Extras Offer

2023 Alfa Romeo Stelvio Ti 2.0L SUV 4WD

Extras Offer

2023 Alfa Romeo Stelvio Veloce 2.0L SUV 4WD

Extras Offer

2023 Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio 2.9L SUV 4WD

* ‘MRLP’ is the manufacturer’s recommended list price as provided by our data provider and is subject to change, so is provided to you for indicative purposes only. Please note that MRLP is inclusive of GST, but is exclusive of any options and does not include on-road costs such as registration, CTP, stamp duty and dealer delivery. Where an MRLP is stated as a price range, this reflects the lowest to highest MRLP provided for that model range across the available variants.
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