2019 Jaguar F-Pace: MPG and fuel economy
The 2019 Jaguar F-Pace is rated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency at 29 combined MPG, with 26 MPG in the city and 33 MPG on the highway. That puts it well above the average for cars in the Small Sport Utility Vehicle 4WD class in the same model year.
This page collects every fuel-economy figure the EPA publishes for the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace. Below you will find the headline combined, city, and highway MPG, the estimated annual fuel cost at three different driving levels, the tailpipe CO₂ emissions, and a full breakdown of the engine and drivetrain. The EPA rates 4 separate variants of this car (different engine, transmission, or drivetrain combinations), and you can compare them side by side in the trims table. If you want to know whether this generation got more or less efficient over the years, the year-over-year table further down covers every model year the EPA has rated.
Key takeaways
- The most efficient car in the Small Sport Utility Vehicle 4WD class for the 2019 model year is the Jaguar I-Pace at 76 MPG.
- The Jaguar F-Pace has lost 5 MPG since its first rated model year, the 2017 Jaguar F-Pace at 29 MPG. That is often a sign of larger engines or heavier curb weights in newer generations.
- EPA estimates this car costs around $3,250 more in fuel over five years than an average new vehicle of the same model year.
Fuel economy at a glance
These are the EPA's official ratings for the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace. The numbers come from a standardised laboratory test cycle and are the same figures that appear on the window sticker of every new car. Real-world mileage varies with driving style, weather, fuel quality, and how heavily loaded the car is.
When the EPA tests several variants of the same nameplate (for example, a front-wheel-drive version and an all-wheel-drive version), each gets its own rating. The figures shown here are the headline variant, taken as the configuration with the best combined MPG. The trims table further down covers all 4 variants side by side.
Combined MPG is a 55/45 weighted blend of the city and highway test cycles. The EPA uses it as the single number you can compare across the entire dataset, including hybrids and EVs (which use the equivalent MPGe figure).
| Combined MPG | 29 MPG |
| City MPG | 26 MPG |
| Highway MPG | 33 MPG |
| Annual fuel cost | $2,800 |
| Tailpipe CO₂ | 352 g/mi |
| Fuel type | Diesel |
How the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace compares
The 2019 Jaguar F-Pace returns 29 combined MPG. Cars in the Small Sport Utility Vehicle 4WD class for the same model year average 24.4 MPG, which puts this car ahead of the class average by about 19%.
The most efficient car in the Small Sport Utility Vehicle 4WD class for the 2019 model year is the Jaguar I-Pace at 76 MPG. The bar chart below puts the Jaguar F-Pace alongside the class best and the class average so you can see the full picture.
For broader context, the average new car of the 2019 model year (across all classes) returns 26.8 MPG. Larger vehicles pull the all-cars average down, so do not use that figure on its own to judge a small car or a hybrid. The full list of the most efficient cars of the 2019 model year is on its own page.
Trim variants rated for 2019
The EPA rates 4 separate variants of the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace. The differences come from the engine size, transmission type, and drivetrain (front-wheel drive, all-wheel drive, and so on). The same nameplate can land several MPG apart depending on the configuration you actually buy.
The most efficient configuration on this page returns 29 MPG, while the least efficient returns 18 MPG. That is a spread of 11 MPG between trims of the same nameplate.
| Engine and transmission | Drive | Combined | City | Highway | Annual cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2L, 4-cyl, turbo, Automatic (S8) | All-Wheel Drive | 29 MPG | 26 MPG | 33 MPG | $2,800 |
| 2L, 4-cyl, turbo, Automatic (S8) | All-Wheel Drive | 24 MPG | 22 MPG | 27 MPG | $2,900 |
| 3L, 6-cyl, supercharged, Automatic (S8) | All-Wheel Drive | 20 MPG | 18 MPG | 23 MPG | $3,450 |
| 5L, 8-cyl, supercharged, Automatic (S8) | All-Wheel Drive | 18 MPG | 16 MPG | 21 MPG | $3,850 |
Annual fuel cost across driving patterns
The headline annual fuel cost the EPA publishes assumes 15,000 miles of driving per year and a fuel mix of 55% city and 45% highway. The dollar figure is calculated using the EPA's current reference price for diesel, which is $5.40/gallon. EPA updates that reference periodically rather than tracking live pump prices, so treat it as a window-sticker estimate rather than today's pump number.
The table below scales the EPA's number to three common driving patterns. The combined MPG and the reference fuel price stay constant, only the annual mileage changes. To get a current-prices estimate, take your local gas price and multiply by 517.2 gallons (the car's annual consumption at the rated MPG).
| Driving pattern | Estimated annual fuel cost |
|---|---|
| Light driver, 7,500 miles per year | $1,400 |
| Average driver, 15,000 miles per year | $2,800 |
| Heavy driver, 25,000 miles per year | $4,667 |
Year-over-year MPG for the Jaguar F-Pace
The EPA has rated the Jaguar F-Pace across 10 model years, from 2017 Jaguar F-Pace through 2026 Jaguar F-Pace. The numbers below are the best combined MPG figure the EPA published for each year, which lets you see when the car was at its most efficient and how recent generations stack up.
The 2017 Jaguar F-Pace returned 29 MPG. The most recent 2026 Jaguar F-Pace returns 24 MPG. That is a drop of 5 MPG over 9 model years. Newer trims that grow heavier or carry larger engines tend to lose efficiency even as the rest of the lineup improves.
| Year | Combined MPG | Open year page |
|---|---|---|
| 2026 | 24 MPG | 2026 Jaguar F-Pace |
| 2025 | 24 MPG | 2025 Jaguar F-Pace |
| 2024 | 24 MPG | 2024 Jaguar F-Pace |
| 2023 | 24 MPG | 2023 Jaguar F-Pace |
| 2022 | 24 MPG | 2022 Jaguar F-Pace |
| 2021 | 24 MPG | 2021 Jaguar F-Pace |
| 2020 | 24 MPG | 2020 Jaguar F-Pace |
| 2019 | 29 MPG | this page |
| 2018 | 29 MPG | 2018 Jaguar F-Pace |
| 2017 | 29 MPG | 2017 Jaguar F-Pace |
Compare against other Small Sport Utility Vehicle 4WD for 2019
If you are cross-shopping the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace, the most useful comparison is against the other cars in the Small Sport Utility Vehicle 4WD class for the same model year. The list below shows the highest-MPG peers, ranked from most to least efficient. Click any of them to open its full page.
The Jaguar I-Pace leads this group at 76 MPG, 47 MPG ahead of the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace.
Specifications
The 2019 Jaguar F-Pace runs a 2-liter 4-cylinder turbocharged engine paired with a automatic (s8), sending power through all-wheel drive.
Engine, transmission, and drivetrain together drive most of the variation in fuel economy across trims. A larger engine moves the car with less effort but burns more fuel. A turbo lets a small engine punch above its weight, often without much MPG penalty. All-wheel drive adds traction and weight, and usually costs a couple of MPG compared with two-wheel drive of the same engine.
- Vehicle class
- Small Sport Utility Vehicle 4WD
- Engine
- 2L 4-cylinder turbocharged
- Transmission
- Automatic (S8)
- Drivetrain
- All-Wheel Drive
- Fuel type
- Diesel
- Annual petroleum use
- 12.3 barrels per year
- Start-stop system
- Yes
Common questions about the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace
Quick answers to the questions people most often search for when looking up the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace.
-
Is the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace fuel efficient?
Yes. The 2019 Jaguar F-Pace returns 29 combined MPG, which beats the average car in the Small Sport Utility Vehicle 4WD class for the same model year by about 19%. -
What MPG does the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace get?
The EPA rates the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace at 29 combined MPG, 26 MPG in city driving, and 33 MPG on the highway. Real-world numbers depend on your driving style, the weather, and how loaded the car is. -
How much does it cost to fuel a 2019 Jaguar F-Pace per year?
The EPA estimates an annual fuel cost of $2,800 for the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace. That figure assumes 15,000 miles of driving per year, a 55% city and 45% highway split, and the EPA's published average fuel price for the rated fuel grade. -
What fuel does the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace use?
The EPA lists the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace as running on diesel. Using a different grade than the manufacturer specifies can affect fuel economy and engine longevity. -
Has the Jaguar F-Pace become more fuel efficient over time?
Combined MPG has actually slipped. The first EPA-rated Jaguar F-Pace, the 2017 Jaguar F-Pace, returned 29 MPG, while the most recent 2026 Jaguar F-Pace returns 24 MPG. A drop of 5 MPG usually traces back to bigger engines or heavier curb weights in newer trims. -
How much CO₂ does the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace emit?
Tailpipe CO₂ emissions are 352 g/mi. Multiplied across a typical year of driving (15,000 miles) that works out to about 5,280 kilograms of CO₂. -
What is the difference between the city and highway MPG of the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace?
City driving returns 26 MPG and highway driving returns 33 MPG, a gap of 7 MPG. A spread that wide is typical of cars with conventional automatic or manual transmissions, where stop-start city traffic eats more fuel than a steady highway cruise. -
What engine is in the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace?
The 2019 Jaguar F-Pace has a 2-liter 4-cylinder turbocharged engine. Smaller turbocharged engines like this one tend to deliver bigger-engine power on demand while keeping fuel economy closer to a non-turbo version of the same displacement. -
What transmission and drivetrain does the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace have?
The 2019 Jaguar F-Pace comes with a automatic (s8) transmission and all-wheel drive. All-wheel-drive variants typically read 1 to 3 MPG lower than the front-wheel-drive equivalent of the same engine, since the extra hardware adds weight and parasitic loss. -
How does the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace compare to the best car in its class?
The most efficient car in the Small Sport Utility Vehicle 4WD class for the 2019 model year is the Jaguar I-Pace at 76 combined MPG. The Jaguar F-Pace returns 29 MPG, a gap of 47 MPG. If you are comparing on fuel economy alone, the class leader is worth a look.
Source: U.S. EPA fuel economy dataset. Annual fuel cost figures assume 15,000 miles of driving per year and a 55% city, 45% highway split. Real-world mileage varies with driving conditions, vehicle maintenance, fuel quality, and driver behaviour.