Volvo Ending Sedan/Wagon Sales in UK, Could North America Be Next?

Matt Posky
by Matt Posky

Volvo Cars is suspending sedan sales in the United Kingdom and it looks like North America could be next if we consider the brand’s rationale. The company has said its sales volume has skewed so heavily toward SUVs and crossovers that it doesn’t make good sense to offer anything else.


The Swedish-Chinese brand had already pulled the S90 from the market earlier this summer. But Volvo expressed its intention to further consolidate its lineup as a way to boost profitability and appears to be taking steps toward that goal. On Tuesday, Autocar noticed that the brand’s online configurator for the U.K. is now absent the S60, V60, and V90.


While the Cross Country variants of the wagons had already been scrubbed, standard variants seem to be following them into the abyss — following the current industry trend of chasing margins, rather than offering a diverse array of automobiles catering to a broader clientele.

However, Volvo is also in the midst of a transition. Like many brands, it has promised to prioritize all-electric vehicles under the assumption that they’ll make more money and be subject to less scrutiny from overzealous government regulators. Even Volvo's marketing for its traditional sedans, wagons, and crossovers tends to focus heavily on hybrid trims. The company’s plant in South Carolina (which builds the S60) is also presently being converted to focus on battery-powered SUVs intended for Volvo and Polestar. The first models are due to arrive next year.


“We continue to rapidly transform our product offer, which means not only moving towards full electrification, but also shifting to new platforms and technologies across all our cars. We will naturally need to evolve and consolidate our line-up as we prioritise [sic] fully electric cars and make this technological transition,” Volvo told Autocar in a statement.


"As a result, we have removed further models from the UK line-up. These include the S60, V60 and V90. Demand for our existing SUV line-up continues to grow, while interest in our forthcoming fully electric EX30 and EX90 models is strong. Meanwhile, appetite for our saloon and estate models has fallen to very low levels in the UK, which has led to our decision to remove these models from sale in the UK.”


It’s a similar story for our market. Regardless of which model you happen to be looking at, volumes of Volvo’s sedans and wagons are roughly half of what they were 10 years ago. Meanwhile, its SUV and crossover volumes have effectively doubled within the same period. With the exception of 2022, this resulted in an overall increase in annual sales every year since 2014.


Volvo sold 64,921 vehicles in the United States in 2015 and managed to move 123,424 units by the end of 2021. The brand has SUVs to thank for its increased volume and market share.

Autocar attempted to drive this point home from a global perspective:


Volvo recently published its global sales figures for the first half of 2023, revealing that its most popular car – an SUV – outsold its entire saloon and estate range by a margin of nearly 70 [percent].
The S90 was the most popular of the now-discontinued cars, with 23,000 sales over the six-month period. The S60 accounted for 18,000 and the V60 just over 16,000. The V90, however, notched up just 7,100.
The best-selling Volvo XC60, meanwhile, sold 106,000, remaining hugely popular even in its sixth year on sale.


While Volvo Cars is still selling actual cars on our market, it seems unlikely that it’s going to continue doing so. The above makes it easy to rationalize dumping everything that’s not an SUV and we’ve already seen American brands doing the same in a bid to chase down margins.


Traditional sedans and wagons now appear to be limited to European luxury brands and mainstream Asian nameplates. Though even Japanese and Korean automakers have been placing a greater emphasis on crossover vehicles, SUVs, and pickup trucks.


Volvo might lose a few would-be wagon or sedan fans to an Audi or BMW. But the crossover lineup has enough overlap to keep some buyers on the lot. Someone who wasn’t totally committed to buying an S90 or S60 could be satisfied with an XC-badged equivalent.

But the company has not committed itself to anything in our market, even if the plan seems obvious. Volvo is betting big on customers buying its all-electric products and plans to offer a totally electrified lineup by 2030. This is backed by mounting regulatory pressures. Though the market will still have its say. Those EX-badged electric crossovers may turn out to be unpopular or end up being further delayed due to software issues. Sedans and wagons could likewise become trendy again, swaying what the brand decides to do.


Volvo has said it wants to “play across all the spectrums and range” with a consumer base that’s interested in different vehicles. That seems as though it would leave room for sedans and station wagons. But its current sales figures don’t fully support this. The Volvo shoppers of today seem overwhelmingly interested in crossover vehicles and SUVs.


[Image: Volvo Cars]

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Matt Posky
Matt Posky

A staunch consumer advocate tracking industry trends and regulation. Before joining TTAC, Matt spent a decade working for marketing and research firms based in NYC. Clients included several of the world’s largest automakers, global tire brands, and aftermarket part suppliers. Dissatisfied with the corporate world and resentful of having to wear suits everyday, he pivoted to writing about cars. Since then, that man has become an ardent supporter of the right-to-repair movement, been interviewed on the auto industry by national radio broadcasts, driven more rental cars than anyone ever should, participated in amateur rallying events, and received the requisite minimum training as sanctioned by the SCCA. Handy with a wrench, Matt grew up surrounded by Detroit auto workers and managed to get a pizza delivery job before he was legally eligible. He later found himself driving box trucks through Manhattan, guaranteeing future sympathy for actual truckers. He continues to conduct research pertaining to the automotive sector as an independent contractor and has since moved back to his native Michigan, closer to where the cars are born. A contrarian, Matt claims to prefer understeer — stating that front and all-wheel drive vehicles cater best to his driving style.

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  • Arthur Dailey Arthur Dailey on Aug 03, 2023

    Our local Volvo dealer recently almost doubled the size of their building and lot. There are a large number of Volvos in our neighbourhood, including Polestars. But then there are also an inordinate number of Teslas and Minis in the neighbourhood. It seems that a significant number of my neighbours consider an auto to be a 'fashion accessory'.

  • 28-Cars-Later 28-Cars-Later on Aug 04, 2023

    This appeared on Reddit, apparently the S/V60 and 90 accounted for 10% of sales in the UK so they are dropping them.


    "While Volvo Cars is still selling actual cars on our market, it seems unlikely that it’s going to continue doing so. The above makes it easy to rationalize dumping everything that’s not an SUV and we’ve already seen American brands doing the same in a bid to chase down margins."


    I'm not going to plug in the crystal ball but as long as there is volume everything will continue to be available in USDM (I thought I read normal cars were still 30 or 40% of Volvo sales here).

  • KOKing Kinda hate to say this but they need to be an American Land Rover sans the offroad image (and capability). Leave the Escalade alone and do a shrunken Escalade-esque lineup (the first time I saw a Hyundai Palisade I thought that was the XT6 that Cadillac shoulda made) and dump the alphabet soup models and trims.
  • Theflyersfan How to fix Cadillac? Blackwing.Now I know (because I've asked) dealers are still thinking they are selling Demons with the kinds of markups on Blackwings, but for enthusiast drivers in the know, those cars are legit. They get lost in the shuffle of M-this and AMG-that, but they hold their own. However, with rising CAFE standards and upcoming emissions requirements, along with European CO2 limits, they all can't be turbo V8s with no hybrid propulsion. So at least mild hybrid them to try to eke out another 8-10 mpg average. That's a good start. Do something with the Escalade. These aren't the early 2000s when they had the hip hop image and every corner had a jet black Escalade with chrome rims. In my area, you just don't see them any longer as money has moved to the Germans. If they want to compete with the Germans, they have to downsize it and crank the engine up to 11. It's still way too truckish to compete with the Q8, X7, and GLS. Even though they probably don't want to, keep the sedans. Don't give those up to the Germans, Japanese, and Koreans as well. And with all that, go all in with performance. Become what BMW was over 15 years ago. They tried that before and half assed it, but they have the tools to make it happen now. Try to appeal to the audience that BMW and Mercedes left behind and that Genesis and Acura are trying to claim (or reclaim). Good luck Cadillac...you'll need it.
  • SCE to AUX Introduce a modern V-16 and put it into a Celestiq-like vehicle instead of electric.
  • DungBeetle62 For where we're at in the product cycle, I think there are bigger changes afoot. With this generation debuting in 2018, and the Avalon gone, is the next ES to be Crown based? That'll be an interesting aesthetic leap.
  • Philip Precht When Cadillac stopped building luxury cars, with luxury looks, that is when they started their downward spiral. Now, they just look like Chevrolet knock-offs, not much luxury, no luxurious looks. Interiors are just generic. Nothing what they used to look like. Why should someone spend $80,000 on a Cadillac when they can spend a LOT less and get a comparable looking Chevrolet????
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