The most interesting luxury car brand on the planet right now is Genesis. Its existing lineup of SUVs and sedans is almost entirely gorgeous, the high-output GV60 Magma is intriguing, the investment in a Le Mans Hypercar is unexpected, and news of a mid-engined V8 homologation special supercar? That’s eye-opening. However, while the Magma GT concept widened pupils and slackened jaws, the G90 Wingback concept seems designed to rearrange brain matter. For its latest concept car, Genesis built a sports wagon out of a big-body luxury sedan, and it looks almost ready for production.
Yep, underneath the shiny side, the G90 Wingback is a Genesis G90, the flagship sedan a whole size class up from something like a BMW 5 Series or a Mercedes-Benz E-Class. We’re talking about an S-Class competitor with optional massaging rear seats, more leather than a Bottega Venetta store, and a massive 125.2-inch wheelbase. Outside of low-volume coachbuilders and a handful of specials made for the Brunei Royal Family, the whole concept of an executive limo wagon hasn’t really been tried before, but the sheer footprint should practically ensure spaciousness.
Indeed, the front doors, wing mirrors, and taillights of the G90 Wingback appear to be shared with the sedan, but everything else is markedly different, starting with that aggressive front clip. Not only does it borrow the lighting from the gorgeous Genesis X Gran Coupe and X Gran Convertible concepts, it adds a handful of butch punch-out vents in the bumper and outrageous fenders. Think supercar-sized fender vents to extract air from the wheel wells, and enough width to cover what appears to be a revised track width. After all, 255-section front tires are only ten millimetres wider than what you get on a standard G90, so this front end doesn’t just cover rubber alone.

Moving around to the side of the G90 Wingback, the whole roof is completely unique, all the way down to a seamless blend into pillars and roof rails. There are a few ways to achieve this including laser welding and brazing, but the effect is downright sleek. It’s also repeatable, as Honda’s used it to great effect on the current Civic. Speaking of the roof, check out those wild fins that really complement the wide arches, rear fender flares, and deep side skirts.

At the same time, Genesis has really blended elements of a sedan with that classic wagon roofline. There’s some wedge to the main character line, big haunches, and even a little ducktail treatment that bisects the tailgate and has let the designers go with a slightly raked rear window. Put it all together and you get a wagon that’s bite-the-back-of-your-hand gorgeous. It’s pure desire on four wheels, and the craziest part is that the G90 Wingback might actually make sense.

Outside of the Subaru Outback which isn’t really a wagon anymore, the only wagons that work from a sales perspective in America occupy the upper echelon of the market. Think AMG E-Class wagons, the Audi RS6 Avant and the BMW M5 Touring. Demand for the M5 Touring alone is just as strong as market desire for the sedan, so if a luxury brand is planning a wagon, it pays to go big. Not only does crossing the six-figure mark and going all-out move units, it also means sweet, sweet margins. You know, a thing that actually solidifies a business case for a niche vehicle. Let’s take a closer look at the competition for a second.

The Audi RS6 Avant is monstrously fast with its 621-horsepower four-liter biturbo V8, but it is getting a bit old. Considering a new A6 is already on sale, the current RS6 Avant probably isn’t long for this world. While a successor is in the works, little is known about the next big, high-performance Audi wagon.

The BMW M5 Touring serves up an obscene 717 horsepower and can glide along on electric power alone, but it weighs more than a Ford F-150, the ride’s quite harsh, the styling’s a bit contentious, and BMW’s been working overtime to alienate its loyal fanbase. This is a great machine for young money, but a bit Marmite to older enthusiasts.

The Mercedes-AMG E 53 Hybrid Wagon is an interesting one. Sure, it only uses a straight-six, but it’s tens of thousands of dollars cheaper than an M5 Touring or RS6 Avant, promises 41 miles of electric range, and can still sprint from zero-to-60 mph in fewer than four seconds. It may be a midsizer like most of its competitive set, but this is one to watch. Mind you, some of the detailing like the thick black bezel around the grille is a touch frumpy.

The Porsche Taycan Cross Turismo and Sport Turismo can be genuinely head-bendingly quick, and they look fantastic, but they’re tiny inside. A scant 32 inches of rear legroom is less than you get in a Corolla, and 15.75 cu.-ft. of rear cargo volume with the seats up isn’t anything to write home about.

If Genesis were to put the G90 Wingback concept into production, it would simultaneously be building in a bracket that works and be boldly going where no other automaker has gone before. See, the Mercedes-AMG E 53 Hybrid, Audi RS6 Avant, and BMW M5 Touring are all midsize performance wagons, capable of dashing from zero-to-60 mph in fewer than four seconds. They aren’t all-out full-size luxury machines, although something tells me that the G90 Wingback has sporting aspirations of its own. I mean, between the styling and the suede interior, there’s probably a reason Genesis rolled it out at the Magma launch event.

While the G90 Wingback concept is likely just a feeler for now, the response I’ve seen from people with S-Class money to spend on a daily driver has been tremendous. Sure, a production-spec G90 Wingback would sell in tiny numbers, but if a business case can be made, there’s no reason not to build it. For now, we’ll just have to ogle the concept car. Hey Siri, play “Oh Yeah” by Yello.


Top graphic image: Genesis









There is a lot I like…and I lot I don’t like. I think its something of a mess in terms of theming. The back and front fender vents in particular go against the flush minimalist vibes.
This article is proof of how incredibly subjective design is. Personally I find this thing fugly.
Fightin’ words!
I like the look of this thing, but for me BMW designed the perfect wagon with the E30 325i Touring. Small outside, big inside, not monstrously heavy, a great engine with modest power, and little enough grip that driving fast required skill.
As a kid my dad used to drive us around in his Citroen CX Safari, and that was pretty good too.
I wonder how hard it was to resist the urge to raise it a little to give that semi SUV look? It’s perfect as it sits. Related: I like the Toyota Crown Signia but it should ride lower.
“Tens of thousand sof”
Yeah. Editing is still an issue here.
Even with articles that are a day behind everyone else’s on the same topic.
We did get this article up as soon as possible. Some outlets who attended the event and were able to get their own image assets had a jump on us, but alas, that happens.
And yes, admittedly our priority has always been on accuracy of great content, grammar, typos, in that order. My philosophy: “Typos mean you’re human, bad grammar mean you’re lazy, inaccuracies are simply unacceptable.” But no doubt we are committed to reducing our typo count (there’s no excuse, as there are plentiful tools at our disposal), as they can be annoying. Thank you for the feedback!
Username checks out.
At least you know it wasn’t written by AI! 100% human error there and I’m here for it.
I already have a Kia and a Hyundai in the garage. Happy with both. And I would kick them both out into the cold to have this in my garage.
Now to wait for it to actually happen, which will give me time to conjure up the six-figure price tag it’s sure to have.
How can this be the perfect wagon when the Ferrari FF already exists, eh?
Maybe it won’t lunch it’s front gearbox as often?
Harsh. But fair.
I’d argue the Ferrari FF is the perfect…shooting brake.
Oh you!
It’s pretty. I would be happy with a G70 wagon though.
If they make this the magic of Korean car depreciation will have them sitting at like 50-60k as soon as they come off their leases. That’s…borderline attainable
My first thought, although if in the $100k range new, depending on how my stock options go …
A new G90 sedan runs like 85-100ish. You can get a two-ish year old one in the high 50s. If you’re willing to go for a pre refresh one they’re in the 30s at this point. I can’t imagine that these will be much different unless they only make them in limited numbers.
My idea of a perfect wagon isn’t the size of a limo.
Even the RS6/M5/E63 wagons that are commonly touted as peak enthusiast mobiles are a class too big imo.
Touting the superiority of wagons because of driving dynamics (while hating crossovers/SUVs) is a bit hollow when the length and weight reach half ton pickup levels.
I’m in agreement with you and that’s why I’m on my second Audi S4 Avant. Small, B platform, modified for plenty of power and handling, and big enough for a couple weeks of camping or a 7,000 mile road trip.
Those sleds are the wagon equivalents of an F-4 Phantom. Proof you can make anything fast if you strap enough engine onto it. Ridiculous, and so is this.
Can somebody just make me a replacement for my e91 BMW? 230hp, a 6spd stick, modest size and weight and cost without all this hur-dur idiocy? I guess in 2025 I can give up the 6spd as a pipe dream in favor of 40 miles of PHEV efficiency?
Though I do agree this is rather pretty compared to ze Germans.
Off subject, but I think F4 Phantoms are one of the coolest looking fighter jets ever. They have one at the Museum of Flight at Boeing field in Seattle. Also an SR-71 and a Concorde.
They are indeed!
I have been to that museum – one of my favorites. If you ever happen to be in Dayton, OH, make sure you make time to go the the Air Force Museum. Stupendous. And free! A B-36 has to be seen to truly be believed.
The big ones I haven’t made it to are Pima in AZ and the SAC Museum near Omaha. And the one in Essen, Germany that has Concorde and Concordski mounted next to each other. My bucket list is long, sigh.
Preach. I want to replace my e91 but there’s really none available. (And only 86k miles). When the time comes I’ll probably pick the i4.
Mine just turned 55K – it’s not going anywhere. But I would love to have something just like it for my place in FL. I like my s212 Mercedes, but it’s no BMW.
What really grinds my gears is that BMW can justify offering the idiotic X2, X4, and X6 “Coupe SAVs” but can’t justify selling the current 3-series wagon in the US. I get that those are all BUILT in the US, but surely there is a case to be made for a proper sporting wagon offering that costs less than $100K. Make the damned thing special order only at a stiff upcharge like Volvo did with the V90.
Now that everything’s a plug-in hybrid or BEV, any car can weigh as much as a half-ton pickup.
Half-ton pickups weigh as much as a small moon these days – while often having the payload capacity of a kid’s little red wagon. Seriously – a hard loaded half-ton can have as little as 1200lbs – and that includes the occupants. Put five plus-size ‘Muricans in the cab and you literally can bring toilet paper home from Costco in one.
Wowza, OMG, I’m quivering in delight! I think I just experienced my first ever big O while looking at that beautiful wagon!
I’ll take this wagon plus the X Gran Convertible.
I do actually find it amazing that Genesis has some really attractive vehicles, both inside and outside. And yet Hyundai and Kia have some really brutal designs.
“a bit Marmite to older enthusiasts”
If you look at it upside down does it become a bit Vegemite?
All these Genesis concepts are great, but they’ve all been the same for years. Just build them already or show something different.
Sweet fancy Moses….
Looks great but also like if you asked chatgpt to draw an audi rs6 avant
Oh my god I’m in love
Amazing. More wagons! I hope the exhaust note sounds as wicked as the car looks.
I am surprised that even how beautiful these wagons look that there is such a high demand for a 6 figure wagon. I think at that price you’d limit the market unless you think it cross shops with anything in the 6 figure market.
Assuming it makes it to production (please, please, please build this thing) it’s probably gonna be a little bit too spendy for my taste (and bank account), but my goodness is it beautiful. No notes. It’s perfect.
I wonder what the longer-term depreciation situation is going to be for Genesis? Pretty much everything they make looks fantastic, but I’m still a bit hesitant to accept a luxury brand from Hyundai as a legitimate competitor for the likes of Mercedes, Audi, BMW, etc. Although, I’m old enough to remember when the LS400 came out, and plenty of people said the same kind of thing about Lexus. “Who wants to buy a fancy Toyota??” Well, we know how that turned out.
The concern back then was that Toyota couldn’t make anything to the same quality as the German brands as for all US customers knew they’ve only made economy cars. We’ve all seen what German quality has been like for the last 20 years, so even though I don’t consider Hyundai at the same level of reliability as Honda/Toyota, they’re still miles ahead of BMW, MB, etc. in my mind. If they play their cards right and actually make good cars for the next 5 years I wouldn’t be surprised if they depreciate more like a Lexus (which is not at all) than any of the old guard after 5+ years.
I think they have a lot of work to do in order to get anywhere close to Toyota’s reputation for quality. For their sake, I hope they figure it out, but I’m not holding my breath.
I’m not saying they’re Toyota quality in any way, I’d probably compare them to Ford and GM’s better products. They seem to have been on an upward trend for at least 5 years, and if they keep it up while knocking it out of the park on a lot of their styling they can become a real contender. Kind of like Infiniti was making a very positive impression between 2000 and 2005 before they gave up on trying to well, everything.
Poor Infiniti… they could have been awesome, but, you know… Nissan.
Infiniti does feel like the correct comparison to me. I’d put Nissan and Hyundai at about the same reliability level in my mind (though I’d probably put Hyundai higher on other metrics), so their luxury brands are in some ways comparable
They don’t have to match Toyota, they just need to beat BMW and Mercedes.
It’s like running from a bear. You don’t need to be the fastest, just faster than the slowest in your group.
Or end up like infinity. Just a tarted up Nissan that people get because they couldn’t afford a BMW
Thank you Jeremy.
My opinions of luxury cars i cannot afford is molded by car shows. Only watch one…
But with the Toyota you got dead solid reliability does Genesis have as good of reputation?
I don’t know about Genesis specifically, but Hyundai/Kia don’t have an awesome reputation for reliability, which is kinda my point. I’m not ready to spend nearly 6 figures on a fancy Hyundai. Yet.
Another way to look at it: you can get great value buying used until their reputation catches up to Lexus.
I would seriously consider it. Gorgeous, and everyone knows wagons are where it’s at.
Take my money
That thing is achingly beautiful. I mean, I don’t know if there’s an angle to photo it from that doesn’t just make you FEEL something.
It’s low, it’s wide, it’s sharp, it’s smooth, it looks visually heavy as hell but not in an ungainly way, more like a “we carved this thing out of a chunk of tungsten and painted it slut-black”
It’s just freakin’ cool.
It’s really cool. Another car to be sad about not being able to afford.
In this segment from this brand, just wait a couple of years. In general, depreciation is not the friend of six figure luxury cars.
For some reason, I’d feel more comfortable owning a used Genesis than a used Mercedes, Audi or BMW.
While I think this looks great, my perfect wagon is the Mercedes E-Class All-Terrain 4×4(squared) from a few years back. The one with the portal axles.