The Final Chrysler 300 Recently Rolled Off the Production Line

Chris Teague
by Chris Teague

The Chrysler 300 is joining its corporate siblings in being discontinued after the 2023 model year, and the automaker recently announced that the last car has left the production line. Workers at the Brampton Ontario Assembly Plant recently gathered to commemorate the end of the line for the car, giving it a sendoff before the automaker moves further toward electrification.


The Velvet Red 2023 Chrysler 300C rolled off the line last week, sporting a 6.4-liter Hemi making 485 horsepower and 475 pound-feet of torque. Though the powertrain delivers incredible performance and a gnarly sound, Chrysler parent Stellantis has been moving away from eight-cylinder engines in favor of its newer inline-six-cylinder mills.


Chrysler has a long history, with the 300 dating back to the 1950s. It ran for several years before taking a nearly 30-year hiatus from the market. It returned in the late 1990s and got further updates in 2005 with a Hemi V8 and later in 2014 with the 6.4-liter engine seen today. It, along with its Dodge counterparts, the Charger and Challenger, have been long overdue for an update, but the move to electrification has changed the role these types of cars will play going forward. Dodge may revive one or both of its cars with a new engine and an electric variant, but Chrysler hasn’t hinted at a return for the 300 down the road.


The 300C joins the Dodge Charger and Challenger in being discontinued after this model year, but its sendoff hasn’t been as elaborate. Dodge gave the coupe and sedan a series of limited-edition models that honor historic models from their long-running histories in the U.S. auto market.


[Image: Chrysler/Stellantis]


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Chris Teague
Chris Teague

Chris grew up in, under, and around cars, but took the long way around to becoming an automotive writer. After a career in technology consulting and a trip through business school, Chris began writing about the automotive industry as a way to reconnect with his passion and get behind the wheel of a new car every week. He focuses on taking complex industry stories and making them digestible by any reader. Just don’t expect him to stay away from high-mileage Porsches.

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  • Art_Vandelay Art_Vandelay on Dec 14, 2023

    I had a Challenger. Were I to buy another of these cars it would be the 300.

  • 3SpeedAutomatic 3SpeedAutomatic on Dec 14, 2023

    This is Déjà vu...

    Remember when Ford closed out of the Panther platform at its Canadian facility in 2012.

    A very sad day.


    Sidenote: my local Ford dealer had a 2011 Lincoln Town Car on his used car lot earlier this month. It was gone in two days!!

  • Bkojote Tesla's in a death spiral right now. The closest analog would be Motorola circa 2007.The formula is the exact same. -Vocal CEO who came in and took credit for the foundation their predecessor while cutting said efforts behind successful projects.-A heavy reliance on price/margin cuts and heavy subsidies to keep existing stock moving. The RAZR became a $99 phone after starting out as a $399 phone, the same way a Model 3 is now a $25k car.-Increasing focus on BS projects over shipping something working and functional to distract shareholders from the failures of current products. Replace "iTunes Phone" (remember that?) with "Cybertruck" and when that's a dud focus on "Java-Linux" the same way they're now focusing "Robotaxis".-Increasingly cut away investment in quality-of-ownership things. Like Motorola, Tesla's cut cut cut away their development, engineering, and support teams. If you ever had the misfortune of using a Motorola Q you're familiar with just how miserable Tesla Autopilot is these days.-Ship less and less completed products as a preview of something new. Time and time again at CES/Trade Shows Motorola was showing half-working 'concept' devices. The Cybertruck was announced 5 years ago yet functionally is missing most of its features- and the ones it has don't work. And I mean basic stuff- the AWD logic is embarrassingly primitive. A lot of Tesla hyperbole focuses on either he's a 4D-chess playing genius visionary or all of Tesla's being propped up by gov't mandates. But the reality is this company hasn't delivered any meaningful product evolution in the better half of this past decade.
  • Pig_Iron Stellantis is looking for excuses to close plants. Shawn Fain just gave them one. 🐹
  • SCE to AUX Unresolved safety issues are a good reason to strike.
  • Eliyahu Tesla is working as well as a full self-driving company can be expected to.
  • JMII No.
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