Almost a month ago, I wrote that the Ford Focus Electric was the cheapest car in North America. Because federal, state, and local incentives are rolled into the price of a lease, along with the sizable discounts applied by the manufacturer, a $30,000 dollar EV can easily be priced below a $16,000 internal combustion model. Those piling discounts on other models have dethroned the Focus as America’s cheapest car.

Fiat’s 500e can currently be had for roughly the same price as a decent pair of sneakers, continuing the trend of bargain basement pricing on small electric cars. At $69 per month for 36 months with no money down, it’s also a better deal than the shoes — which can typically only manage a few hundred miles before becoming a tattered mess. With some evening reprieves to recharge, the Fiat can top that in a week with only the slightest hint of tread-wear. However, this incredibly low leasing rate for the $33,00 EV isn’t even the best deal of the last few months.

On Black Friday, Orange Coast Fiat in Costa Mesa, California, had the little electric listed at $49 per month with no money down — 20 dollars below the current unbelievable price.

Why is the 500e going for so cheap? One big reason is that Fiat Chrysler never really intended to sell any. “I hope you don’t buy it because every time I sell one it costs me $14,000,” FCA CEO Sergio Marchionne said at the Brookings Institution of the 500e in 2014. “I’m honest enough to tell you that.”

The EV was developed by Fiat Chrysler specifically as a compliance car to satisfy emissions regulations in California and other states mandating the sale of zero-emission vehicles. The company never had any intent to make this vehicle a sales leader or profitable, it only exists to keep its other, less environmentally friendly, vehicles in those markets.

It has also suffered from extensive recalls and is among bottom of the pack in terms of range; while the majority of its competitors have implemented stronger battery units the 500e uses a 24 kWh lithium-ion that sustains it for 87 miles under the ideal circumstances.

The average transaction price for the Fiat 500e was $11,129 through February and the typical incentive dollars-per-unit spent was $14,463. That is an incentive spend of 130 percent of its average transaction price.

Even some of the worst deals currently available still place the 500e well below the company advertised $169/month leasing offer. Websites are offering deals anywhere between the previously mentioned $69 a month up through $149. Green Car Reports has also cited off-lease 2013 Fiat 500es as being listed on Southern California auction sites for as little as $4,100.

[Image: Fiat Chrysler] [Source: Automotive News]