Final Camaro Rolls Off Assembly Line

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

It’s the end of the line (again) for the Chevy Camaro. According to reports, the brand has wrapped up production of the model entirely, a few weeks past its best-before date thanks to delays partially brought on by UAW strike action earlier this year.


Insiders at GMAuthority.com say their sources indicate the last Camaro was built yesterday, December 14th, bringing to a close the sixth-generation chapter of this tire smoking book. Initially, a stop build date of late November was suggested, a date which was met for convertible production but extended for assembly of the final two-door hardtop coupes. Order books for the 2024 model year closed in early September.


Company spox have been mouthing suggestions that this week’s production halt “is not the end” of the Camaro story, presumably with the company having some sort of electric vehicle bearing the same model name up its corporate sleeve. We see how such a marketing exercise has transpired for the Blazer nameplate, culminating in the spectre of an EV crossover which counts front-wheel drive as part of its planned powertrain availability. If the same configuration crops up for Camaro, you best be sure we’ll all be dusting off our acid-washed jean jackets and mullet wigs before marching on Ren Cen with haste.


Those two items are standard company issue at TTAC, by the way.*


*Wigs? No no, we mean the genuine article mullet -- Ed.


For motorsport fans wondering out loud if the likes of Chase Elliott will be piloting Malibu-branded racecars next year, fear not. Chevy has committed to running the Camaro name in multiple series for 2024, including NASCAR and IMSA. Same goes for the NHRA and the Supercars Championship. We’ll have to wait and see what’s in the hopper beyond next year. It’s a good-looking hot rod in most of its motorsport iterations, so this gearhead is feverishly hoping an equally attractive whip appears in 2025.


Through the first three quarters of this year, Chevy has moved 24,688 Camaro coupes and convertibles, a healthy jump of nearly 30 percent from the year prior. In contrast, Ford managed to sell 35,315 Mustangs, about equal to the same time frame 12 months ago, while Dodge sloughed off 35,350 Challengers (down from 42k) and 63,647 Chargers (flat). Yeah, I know the latter is a sedan but the point remains.


In any event, this leaves the Mustang as the last man standing in Detroit - at least in terms of this segment. Think there'll be any sort of a reprise beyond the expected EV aspirations?


[Image: GM]


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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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  • EV-Guy EV-Guy on Dec 18, 2023

    I would have liked to see an EV sports coupe in the works before Camaro ended - looks like a missed opportunity for GM to retain some market share. Electric makes sense here:

    1) Higher performance

    2) Buyers willing to pay more for that performance

    3) Less likely to be used on long trips - fast charging network less important.

    • Art_Vandelay Art_Vandelay on Dec 19, 2023

      I can’t think of a segment less likely to embrace an EV than Camaro buyers. You are more likely to get them to give up Marlboros


  • Wjtinfwb Wjtinfwb on Dec 19, 2023

    I really hope the Camaro lives on a V8 gas-fueled car and if it does have to go out, ends it's run with some type of flagship like the GT500 Mustang or the Hellcat Last Call editions. The last thing this storied model name needs is some half-baked limited range EV that can get to 60 in 3 seconds, once, then needs a 30-minute recharge. GM's new Ultium platform is causing all sorts of headaches as the below article written by an EV fan club mag shares. The 2024 Chevrolet Blazer EV Left Me Stranded In Rural Virginia (msn.com)

  • Bd2 Anything with a Hyundai logo of authenticity is the best car for anyone.
  • Mike Beranek Gee, UAW status at this plant would eliminate this problem entirely, wouldn't it?
  • CanadaCraig VoGhost - According to the Harvard Study that you may have referenced, millions of those deaths are caused by wildfires [forest fires] and agricultural burns. How many are actually caused by people driving their ICE powered cars? That said.... I wonder how many lives are SAVED because of fossil fuels. How many people are not freezing to death each year? [and so on]
  • Ptcruiser Put a PTEazer nose on it and let Chrysler sell some. Make it a 2 seater with no back seats. Have two or three battery pack versions. Affordable 140 mile pack. 180 mile pack. 240 mile pack. All versions to offer plug in behind seats, pack plug ins under flat storage floor, for EGO batteries for extended range. Room for 4 or 5 across and 2 or 3 rows back. Apartment life could have two home chargers to charge up multiple EGO batteries. EGO batteries would recharge main packs when main packs are below EGO battery level. One way power draw. Since Apartment life is without charging abilities.
  • Varezhka Not the biggest surprise, considering that the new 500 is a platform sibling of a similarly sized (but dead) Opel Adam. And Italy, its biggest market, is not the best market for BEVs. Curious if it will be the same 1.2L I3 mild hybrid as the bigger 600.
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