Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. News

The last two affordable station wagons in America are about to retire

Add as a preferred source on Google
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The Volkswagen Golf Sportwagen and Golf Alltrack (pictured) will soon have more in common with the born-again Beetle than the emblem on their nose. The German automaker confirmed both nameplates will retire at the end of 2019, and it’s not currently planning on replacing them on the American market.

The Sportwagen (formerly a Jetta, now a Golf) was once one of Volkswagen’s hippest and most popular models, but sales dipped as buyers pivoted toward crossovers and SUVs. Volkswagen explained crossovers and SUVs defend a 47-percent share of the American market so far in 2019, and they represent over 50 percent of its sales. The ongoing shift has dented the popularity of every body style, including the traditional sedan, but wagons took the biggest hit.

Recommended Videos

We knew the two wagons would retire soon, because the seventh-generation Golf they’re based on is at the end of its life cycle. SUV dominance isn’t limited to the United States, and Volkswagen might not even develop a station wagon variant of the eighth-generation Golf for Europe, the body style’s last bastion. British magazine Autocar learned the long-roof could be dropped as the firm moves to simplify the Golf lineup. Volkswagen hasn’t commented on the report, so we need to wait until the eighth-generation Golf makes its debut later in 2019 to find out more.

While the Sportwagen and the Alltrack didn’t represent a huge chunk of Volkswagen’s American sales, they’ll leave a gap that the company plans to fill by releasing — you guessed it — additional crossovers and SUVs over the coming years. It will introduce a shorter, five-seater variant of the Atlas by the end of 2019, an electric model previewed by the ID Crozz concept in 2020, and a sub-Tiguan soft-roader in 2021.

In the meantime, American motorists determined to resist the siren song of the crossover and hunting for a great station wagon still have a handful of options to choose from, though all of them are more expensive than the outgoing Volkswagens. The Subaru Outback is entering the 2020 model year after receiving a full redesign that adds a sharper look, a new platform, and more tech. The Buick Regal TourX stands out as the only American station wagon sold in the United States. Both are relatively rugged models with a crossover-esque design. Buyers who want a regular wagon will need to stretch their budget to reach the Volvo V60.

Ronan Glon
Ronan Glon is an American automotive and tech journalist based in southern France. As a long-time contributor to Digital…
Mercedes-Benz and Chipolo made a key tracker to match your car fob
Chipolo’s Mercedes-Benz tracker supports Apple Find My and Google Find Hub
Chipolo Loop Bluetooth tracker attached to car key

If you own a Mercedes-Benz or just like the brand enough to want your accessories to match, Chipolo’s latest Loop tracker is made with you in mind. The two brands have teamed up on a new premium Bluetooth tracker designed specifically for Mercedes-Benz car keys. The tracker has a black matte shell, a brushed metal key hook, and a chrome Mercedes-Benz logo on the front.

Other than using it for your car keys, you can also hook it up to your handbag, backpack, suitcase, or travel pouch, and use it like a general-purpose tracker.

Read more
Samsung’s OLED tech gives the Ferrari Luce a dashboard unlike anything in a car before
Samsung Display just put its best display work not in a phone, but in a Ferrari.
Ferrari Luce

Ferrari just unveiled the Luce, its first all-electric car, and its design has been really divisive. Designed by former Apple design chief Jony Ive, the car is definitely turning heads, and not all for the right reasons. 

That said, while the exterior design is controversial, very few people can deny that the car's interior is unlike anything you have seen before. One of the first things that stands out is the futuristic display aesthetic.

Read more
Ferrari’s first EV is here, and the Luce might be the brand’s most controversial car yet
Ferrari enters the EV era with the polarising new Luce
Ferrari Luce

Ferrari has officially entered the electric era with the unveiling of the all-new Ferrari Luce, the first fully electric production car in the company’s history. Revealed in Rome, the Luce marks one of the biggest shifts the Maranello-based automaker has made since the company was founded in 1939.

For years, Ferrari resisted going fully electric. The company repeatedly argued that emotion, sound, and driver engagement were core to the Ferrari experience, something enthusiasts believed could not exist without a combustion engine. Even when rivals like Porsche launched EVs such as the Porsche Taycan and brands like Lamborghini began discussing electrification strategies, Ferrari largely stayed focused on hybrids and traditional performance cars.

Read more