Buick Teases Next Enclave

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

The tri-shield brand continues to push forth into that good night, bragging about sales increases in this country whilst showing off a shadowy image of what is said to be the next three-row Enclave.

Little is known about the upcoming 2025 Enclave, other than it will retain its perch atop the Buick lineup in an effort to tempt buyers shopping for a snazzy three-row crossover. There’s no indication this thing will be an EV, particularly since spy shots which surfaced last year showed a rig with dual tailpipe cannons jutting out from its rear valence. We do expect a decent leap in cabin digital real estate, likely to emulate the huge curved screens found in some recent efforts from Cadillac.


We’ve all seen the memes comparing the little Envista to a Urus, one probably initiated by the same blind mice which suggested the Ferrari Purosangue looked like a Mazda. Both share only a brief resemblance to the other, such as wheels and the ability to move under their own power. Still, the Buick stylists have hit on something with their new language and it’ll be interesting to see how it translates to a large three-row crossover like the Enclave.


Buick also took the chance to boast it is this country’s “fastest-growing mainstream brand”, which is like a child asserting they should win a Most Improved award for dragging their marks up from a failing 25 to a passable 76. Sure, the leap is large – but context is required, especially coming off several years in which all brands suffered at the hands of pandemic, microchip, and interest rate problems plus whatever else was the crisis du jour. 


Looking at raw numbers, the Enclave sold 39,411 units in 2023, a sum indeed up 29.1 percent from the previous year and about a quarter of Buick’s volume. Other comparable vehicles include the Toyota Highlander (169,543 sales in 2023) and Honda Pilot (110,298 sales). 


Should any PR types wish to carp that we ought to be comparing the Enclave with roughly equal three-row upmarket variants, the Lexus TX sold 8,201 units in the couple of months it has been on sale whilst the Acura MDX shifted 57,599 units through the whole of 2023.


In case you’re keeping score at home, the Enclave is one of numerous ‘En’ crossover-type vehicles prowling Buick showrooms – sharing space with the Envision, Envista, and Encore GX. The latter is sounds confoundingly like a trim level but is not. Hey, at least they’re actual names and not the alphanumeric soup foisted on the Cadillac brand by Dunderhead de Nysschen during his reign of terror. Fortunately, that house is brooming the asinine CTXT12345 numerology for monikers that sound like something – even if they all end in ‘iq’.


Additional details on the Buick Enclave, including available features and pricing, will be announced later this year.


[Image: Buick]


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Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

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  • Teddyc73 Teddyc73 on Jan 23, 2024

    "actual names and not the alphanumeric soup foisted on the Cadillac brand by Dunderhead de Nysschen" I always found it interesting and amusing how people criticized Cadillac and Lincoln for alphanumeric names but it was perfectly OK for every other high end premium brand. Why is that?


    Hey Matt, can you just report on the subject at hand instead of injecting your clear hatred for the Buick brand?

  • Lorenzo Lorenzo on Jan 23, 2024

    I've owned three Buicks: a 1963 LeSabre with a Buick 401 cid V8, a 1980 Regal with the Buick 231 cid V6, and a 1978 Electra with a Oldsmobile 403 cid V8. The Regal got stolen, but the V8s lasted 24 years each.


    Buick needs to bring back 17 foot long, 6-1/2 foot wide sedans with naturally aspirated 400 cid V8 engines. Six-foot-five, 260-pound westerners need them in the west where the roads are straight, the distances are long, and the womenfolk won't put up with long drives in 4-door pickups or S-U-Vs.

  • Teddyc73 Oh look dull grey with black wheels. How original.
  • Teddyc73 "Matte paint looks good on this car." No it doesn't. It doesn't look good on any car. From the Nissan Versa I rented all the up to this monstrosity. This paint trend needs to die before out roads are awash with grey vehicles with black wheels. Why are people such lemmings lacking in individuality? Come on people, embrace color.
  • Flashindapan Will I miss the Malibu, no. Will I miss one less midsize sedan that’s comfortable, reliable and reasonably priced, yes.
  • Theflyersfan I used to love the 7-series. One of those aspirational luxury cars. And then I parked right next to one of the new ones just over the weekend. And that love went away. Honestly, if this is what the Chinese market thinks is luxury, let them have it. Because, and I'll be reserved here, this is one butt-ugly, mutha f'n, unholy trainwreck of a design. There has to be an excellent car under all of the grotesque and overdone bodywork. What were they thinking? Luxury is a feeling. It's the soft leather seats. It's the solid door thunk. It's groundbreaking engineering (that hopefully holds up.) It's a presence that oozes "I have arrived," not screaming "LOOK AT ME EVERYONE!!!" The latter is the yahoo who just won $1,000,000 off of a scratch-off and blows it on extra chrome and a dozen light bars on a new F150. It isn't six feet of screens, a dozen suspension settings that don't feel right, and no steering feel. It also isn't a design that is going to be so dated looking in five years that no one is going to want to touch it. Didn't BMW learn anything from the Bangle-butt backlash of 2002?
  • Theflyersfan Honda, Toyota, Nissan, Hyundai, and Kia still don't seem to have a problem moving sedans off of the lot. I also see more than a few new 3-series, C-classes and A4s as well showing the Germans can sell the expensive ones. Sales might be down compared to 10-15 years ago, but hundreds of thousands of sales in the US alone isn't anything to sneeze at. What we've had is the thinning of the herd. The crap sedans have exited stage left. And GM has let the Malibu sit and rot on the vine for so long that this was bound to happen. And it bears repeating - auto trends go in cycles. Many times the cars purchased by the next generation aren't the ones their parents and grandparents bought. Who's to say that in 10 years, CUVs are going to be seen at that generation's minivans and no one wants to touch them? The Japanese and Koreans will welcome those buyers back to their full lineups while GM, Ford, and whatever remains of what was Chrysler/Dodge will be back in front of Congress pleading poverty.
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