My right foot is pushing down so hard I’m making a new dent in the floor, yet I’m not gathering any speed. Cars are swarming in the rear-view mirror NASCAR-style, looking for the chance to blast past or through me. There’s a soaking wet hairpin coming up, and slowing down will result in me wearing a VW Golf as a necklace, so there’s only one thing to do: strain a bicep hauling the little car through on the door handles and hope terminal understeer doesn’t see me ploughing off the tarmac and not stopping until I hit Austria. The Golf riding my chuff is treated to a slow-motion display of will-it-won’t-it topple over, but thankfully I make it around the bend shiny-side up.
I wish I could say I was being a helmsman in the never-ending pursuit of bringing you a delightful story. Man, machine, road, harmony – all that at-the-limit bollocks. Nope. The above tale of vehicular terror took place at less than sixty kilometers an hour, not miles per. In fact, it was slightly less speed than that, because the car in question – a Yugo, as you have surely surmised by the top graphic – stubbornly refused to hold onto any velocity whatsoever when presented with even the mildest of inclines. This is the grim reality of driving a Yugo, a car without a country nor any redeeming characteristics whatsoever.


Automotive internet hipsters will proclaim that no small Euro hatch based on Fiat mechanicals that combines a manual gearbox with unassisted steering can be that bad. Let me assure you, it very much fucking can be that bad. Possibly even worse. Maybe you harbor an inkling that a Yugo is a bit rubbish, but somehow charming all the same. I am here to disabuse you of that thinking straight away. A car this horrible cannot be reassessed or have a redemption arc. After driving one, I cannot in good conscience lead you up the aisle to a thoughtful consummation because the Yugo is rottener than week-worn knickers and worse than a case of uncurable turbo Herpes.

Where It All Began
Our tale of woe begins after the second World War. Although primarily a weapons manufacturer, Zastava Arms had also been building Chevrolet trucks in the former Yugoslavia until that ended when the Axis powers invaded in 1939. After liberation, the company wanted to expand beyond armaments, so they built a new factory named Zavodi Crvena Zastava (Horse Boiling and Dangerous Toy Company, probably). By 1954, they had signed an agreement with Fiat to build the Italian cars under license, starting out with 1100s and 1400s. Then, in 1955, the company hit automotive paydirt with a version of the Fiat 600. In 1960, the Zastava 750 was born by bolting in a bigger 25bhp 767cc engine, which upped performance over the original from glacially slow to merely catastrophic. If my experience is anything to go by, this would remain a Yugo trademark. As had happened in Italy, these simple, rugged, affordable little cars became extremely popular and played a big part in putting the former Yugoslavia on wheels.
In 1969, Fiat dropped yet another revolutionary small car, the 128. Although front-wheel drive had been pioneered by the Mini, that car’s powertrain was compromised by putting the gearbox in the sump and the radiator inside the fender – both galactically stupid decisions – which the Fiat 128 improved upon. Like an unwanted case of rusty ass-water, the Zastava copy – the 101 – appeared two years later. Impressively, the bodywork was reengineered to have a hatchback, way before any of the Western European manufacturers had managed such a feat. To replace the aging 750, Zastava then shortened the 128/101 platform, gave it a body of their own design, and unleashed the resulting unholy bastard upon an unsuspecting world in 1980 – the Zastava Yugo.
These two cars, along with the company itself, would undergo a series of name changes across different markets, presumably to protect the guilty. The Zastava 101 became the Yugo 311, and the new smaller model was the Yugo 45/55/60 (with the number dependent on how many Balkan farm nags were under the hood). By the early 1980s, these fucking miserable grinding boxes were beginning to infect western markets, selling to the sort of proudly stingy people who refuse to split the bill equally at dinner. They sold by virtue of being half the price of an equivalent Euro supermini, because in terms of driving dynamics, build quality, equipment, and engineering, you were getting half the fucking car. The Fiat 128/Yugo 311 was a good car for its time; unfortunately, that time was a decade earlier, in 1969. The smaller 45/55 lumbered with a heavy body that crippled its performance. Despite being 14” (365mm) shorter than the Fiat 128 the Yugo 45 was 165lbs (75kg) heavier, because it was made with the finest grade pig iron.
Roll Up, Roll Up, Get Your Yugos Here
By the middle of the eighties, the Kragujevac factory was a considerable source of pride for the region, providing good jobs and building 200,000 cars a year. This caught the attention of carnival barker and P.T. Barnum of the automotive industry, Malcolm Bricklin, whom Rolling Stone magazine described as,“Brash, bombastic, and pathologically prone to betting the farm on pie-in-the-sky automotive endeavors.”
Bricklin’s route to fame and fortune involved finding cheap cars from elsewhere in the world and foisting them onto American consumers, something he first did with the Subaru 360, a car more suited to golf courses than American highways. After further automotive misadventures, including his own half-assed SV-1, he scoured the globe looking for another cheap car to bring stateside – and in the Yugo, he found it. With a $3990 rice sticker slapped across the windscreen, American tightwads of 1985 could repel polite society just like their European cousins. Witness these hapless squares smiling in the face of impending trade-in value calamity. Serves them right.
Looking at the Yugo, it’s the definition of anonymity. More banal than budget hotel room artwork, it resembles those non-cars insurance companies use in their commercials so they don’t get sued into the middle of next week. It’s a dour box perfect for the shame-free unbranded sportswear normies who would have considered this acceptable transportation. The Yugo looks like a car designed by a drunken Yugoslav engineer, half remembering a VW Polo he once spotted while at an export conference in West Berlin. Blockier than off-brand Lego, there’s no sensitivity or nuance in any of the lines. It’s like an afterthought created from no thought in the first place. The stance is atrocious; the body is too big for the track and wheelbase – or rather, those dimensions are too small. The Yugo is so knock-kneed that if it weren’t so bloody heavy for its size, a strong wind would blow it over.
My Sinuses Are Burning
This parallel-universe car gives me a demonstration of how its engineers had never even clapped eyes on a Western supermini when I try to unlock it. There’s a small black plastic semi-circle on the door where you would normally expect the interior locking plunger to be. This little circle has a green sticker on it, so naturally, I yank the handle expecting the door to be unlocked. But no. Green means the door is locked, and then when you turn the key, the black semi-circle rotates to present you with a red sticker, indicating the door is now unlocked. What in the actual jumping blue fuck is that all about? Does green indicate to the driver you’re now good to go and get blootered on plum brandy, comrade?


Getting in, the first thing that hits me is not the unjoyful shade of gulag grey everywhere – no, it’s the sinus-searing stench of glue holding the interior together. I have visions of that scene in The Rockford Files where Jim is driving utterly off his face on nitrous oxide. If hot-boxing solvent fumes makes me crash, that’s one less Yugo in the world, and I’ll be laughing my ass off about it. The factory assemblers must have daubed the liquidized dobbin on with a three-inch brush, but not to affix the dashboard, which is a riot of visible black screw heads. The dash itself looks like it was vacuum-formed as one big molding out of plastic that would shame an ice cream tub. The radii are huge, and tapping it makes a sound hollower than Bricklin’s sales pitch. There’s no glove compartment, no radio, no center armrest – in fact, no anything. All you get is two black orifices set into the binnacle – speedo in one and fuel gauge and all your warning lights stuffed in the other. To the left there’s a row of chunky rockers to for the lights, fan (?), heated rear window, rear washer, and hazards. Mold lines and switch blanks abound, and the flimsy stalks have a stiff feeling to their action that makes you think they’re on the verge of snapping. The total lack of build quality suggests these crates were thrown together from five yards.

I try to adjust the seat but fail miserably because in another one of those that’s not how I expected it to work moments, the lever at the base of squab lowers the backrest, sending me flying backwards. I yank it back upright again because I’m not a gangsta. Crunched up under the cheap-feeling steering wheel, I give the tiller a wiggle, which reveals twenty or thirty degrees of pure free play before hitting any resistance. The pedals are too close together for my size eleven feet. High on glue fumes or not, I hate this shit heap already, and I haven’t even started the cursed thing yet.
Being the freeze-dried basic Yugo 45, under the hood is Fiat’s venerable ‘100’ inline four dating from 1955. It has a cast iron block containing a chain-driven cam, an aluminum head with valves operated by pushrods, and a single choke carb the diameter of a cat’s asshole. Displacing a whopping 903cc, all this non-innovative engine technology makes 45bhp and 45lbs ft of torque, transmitted to the road via a four-speed box with a shift action longer than a Belgrade bread queue in the eighties. Keeping the rubber on the tarmac are Macpherson struts up front and a transverse leaf spring at the hind end, which gives the Yugo a tail high demeanor like a skunk about to piss its pong juice everywhere.


It’s Not Just Heavy, It’s Dog Slow Into The Bargain
Pulling away, the first thing that hits me is how physical this car is to drive. Once you freewheel past the dead zone, the steering enters the hernia zone. Not only that, it has a mind of its own, with an alarming tendency to wander all over the place as it pulls the plasticky steering wheel rim through your hands. It’s like trying to steer a shopping cart full of car batteries – if you don’t watch out, you’ll be going in a direction other than the one you wanted. The brakes present a similar muscle-building workout. Press the pedal and it’s solid, like there’s a kink in the lines or a seized caliper. There’s no movement and nothing happens. Strain a thigh muscle and eventually some speed begins to fall off, which, combined with the drunken body roll, gave me a large code brown at the first roundabout I encountered.

Luckily, none of this is happening at speeds that could be construed as fast. The speedo is in km/h, but the gentle rises on the landesstraßen sees me struggling to maintain much more than about 75 km/h (46 mph). On anything other than dead level (or downhill) tarmac, the motor just doesn’t have the torque to cover the gaps in the gearing inherent in a four-speed box. First gets you rolling, then it’s straight into second. Third is OK for urban trundling, but when the motor is screaming and you grab fourth, the revs drop off and the engine bogs hideously. Alternating between third and fourth to drive around the bogging just results in you pogoing down the road with the engine heehawing louder than the Concorde crashing into a saucepan factory.
At the top of this piece, I tried to describe what it was like trying to take one of the tight corners on the road out of Dietzhölztal. That wasn’t hyperbole: I genuinely was a mobile chicane. And the rain, which had been on and off since arriving in the Fatherland, was very decidedly on again. After about three-quarters of an hour subjecting myself to the Yugo, I decided I’d had enough of the fucking thing and found a spot to turn around and head back. Sometimes you just know things are not going to get any better, and this was one of those occasions. The Yugo was a dangerous menace to myself and other road users, and the sooner I gave the keys back, the better.
But as you’ve gathered by now, life doesn’t treat me like that. Safely back at the museum, enjoying a remedial coffee and cigarette, I reviewed all the video footage I’d shot while on my drive. I got a new phone recently, and in a spectacular example of ass-hattery, I’d managed to shoot everything in slo-mo. How this happened, I don’t know – I only hope it’s not the first episode of my drifting away from modern technology as I shuffle towards the grave. But it did mean I was going to have to go out in the Yugo again to re-film everything – my gift for being my own worst enemy continues to keep on giving.

My First Piece Of OEM Swag
When I gratefully backed the thing into its parking space for a second time, one of the organizers bounded over in the pissing rain to greet me as I got out.
“Wow Adrian, you’ve been out in this twice, you must really love it!” said Nicole, smiling her most disarming smile.
“No. It’s the exact opposite of that. I unreservedly hate it with every fiber of my being, but I fucked up the filming and had to redo it.”
“Oh well. Here’s a keyring for you!”
And with that, she handed me my first-ever piece of OEM swag: a keyring. A fucking Yugo keyring. A memento to lie buried in a drawer, which will give me a jolt of PTSD if I ever glance at it, like when Facebook suggests a psycho ex-girlfriend as someone I should add as a friend.

While doing follow-up research for this piece, I found an old drive feature of a Yugo 55 GLS in the October 1984 issue of Car magazine. The author takes a bit of a derisive and arrogant tone towards the car, and this was the prevailing attitude across automotive media towards Yugos (and other Eastern European cars) at the time. Likewise, the US Yugo kept late-night comedians in monologues for months. Normally, I’d dismiss all this as a pile-on and try and find something about the car I could defend, or even champion. But not in this case. The Yugo is comfortably the worst car I have ever driven.

First a Ssangyong Rodius and now a Yugo. Welcome to my automotive media career. Where it’s always fucking winter and never Christmas.
Top graphic image: Car Design Event
That’s oddly specific but one of the best bad car handling analogies I’ve read. I instantly knew how that would feel like.
The worst car I’ve ever driven was a (low mileage) ’84 Oldsmobile Skyhawk sedan with the base 1.8L engine and a 4-speed manual. I simply can’t imagine a Yugo being worse.
Adrian, I laughed out loud multiple times reading this. It was the jolt of joy that I needed at the end of this very monday-ish Monday. I’m sorry you had to drive this contraption (twice!) but it did inspire you to an unmatched snarky review. Thank you, I needed that.
A little known fact, although everybody I know, knows it, is it the brains of every comedy duo is the goofball. It takes a remarkable amount of intelligence to do that sort of thing.
Wait a second, I thought Jason was the goofball.
I cannot wait for you to get an FSO Polonez to road test. Thank you Adrian for another massively entertaining read
Road test, live with, shuttle Jason and Beau to Goodwood, try to put through an MoT…
Camp out at Rustival next year in a Bedford CA.
There are many great lines in this piece but “a shift action longer than a Belgrade bread queue in the eighties” got me!
It’s a damn shame the people that consume the Autopian on MSN will never see this fine article
I say this as someone who purchased a used Chevette in 1987, when Yugos were still available. I can say without a shadow of a doubt that a brand new Yugo was infinitely worse than a well-used Chevette in every conceivable way.
Adrian’s is 100% the correct take on the Yugo. Nobody who professes to like them has any ability to understand whether they are enjoying themselves ironically or not. A person who lacks the self-awareness to understand why they like something can never be truly trusted on any subject.
So where is that video? I think this would be hilarious to watch. As one of those cheap bastards you mentioned I actually looked at buying a Yugo when the local Chevy Dealership had the franchise. You fail to mention that in the US Dealerships upgraded the Yugo with a stereo system, two speakers so yeah that’s stereo right? Said stereo system was in every Yugo on the lot, was at best the equivalent of one of those cheap stereo systems that you could buy at Kmart, pre Walmart for about $39.99 but the sticker showed that radio as a $999.99 option. I passed on it.
Please continue to convince Adrian to test drive appalling vehicles. His vitriol is poetic. I would read a 400 page book of one review of automotive dogshit after another. Throw him a bone once in a while with a Lotus or something, just to keep him from losing his mind.
I wonder if Adrian is a bit of a masochist, which is why he writes so well about his pain. The good news is that if that is true, the quality of this content is likely to give him many more opportunities. Is there a Velorex in his future?
Masochist? Or just British?
Boarding school does things to a boy.
It makes him British.
I don’t say this lightly…
This is the best car review I’ve ever read. Enjoyed it immensely. Can we get more Adrian hate-reviews? Seriously. This was phenomenal work. I see an issue here, as you would be subjected to cars that you despise. Maybe just cars other people like and we get the Adrian roast session.
When I was a kid, I always had to clean the bathrooms because I was the best at cleaning them. The other 3 kids didn’t have to.
This is a similar reward. You’re such a good writer when you’re miserable, lets make you miserable much more often
Like Adrian being the wheel of a surviving Chevy Vega? Or an 80s Dodge Charger? Sign me up.
Top five for me, just below “Bare: Car”, a (hopefully fictional) review by someone who had never driven a car before, from a ’90s era Deadline magazine. Sadly, I can’t find a copy online and I probably lost the paper copy.
I second the desire for more hate-reviews from Adrian. An idea: alternate the reviews from classic shitboxes (Trabant perhaps?) to modern garbage (VinFast?).
Boy, you and Torch are not exactly in the same page when it comes to automotive tastes, are you? Is the next car you drive for an article going to be a 2CV?
A wonderful piece of writing, that really captures the spirit of this car.
I’ve only driven one rather worn example, I got conned into it as I could drive a stick and yeah I was in shock with the weight of the steering at slow speeds.
No fun to be had, except when it happens to somebody else. (-;
Doesn’t Torch have one as part of his marginal car collection.
Maybe unload the key ring on him.
He found a sucker to give his away to.
I will gladly except yours if you don’t want it.
If I had to say something nice…I guess the paint looks good enough? Also the seat fabrics look…OK?
Sideways reference – Nick drives an orange GV in Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist. There’s a great extended scene where Norah’s drunken best friend Caroline, before disappearing into the city and setting off the plot, gets trapped inside and they all stand around outside trying to get her to work the crazy lock. Fun movie, great soundtrack.
So, in spite of the enthusiasm of your writing, I gather you do not care for the Yugo?
They are popular in Verplanck I hear.
Whatever gave you the idea I didn’t like it?
Oh.
With you Brits it’s hard to tell whether unremitting awfulness is a good thing or a bad thing.
Conversely, when the man who was raised by Austin Allegro owners tells you the Yugo’s worse…
Well I was raised by MG 1100 owners. Which I was rather fond of. Was the Allegro that much worse? Granted it looks like a package of frozen peas left in the sun.
You push Yugo.
Yugo the automotive equivalent of English cooking.
Now that is marketing
Somehow, this has not dissuaded me from still wanting to own one. Frankly, my commute is 12 minutes each way, involves no major hills, and doesn’t go north of 45mph, so it seems well suited for the job. I’m also immensely jealous of the keyring!
Presumably you are already familiar with Midwest Bayless. They’ve got tons of Yugo parts.
I’ve started stacking Midwest Bayless magnets on my fridge for fun at this point…
I believe the actual measurement term for Yugo parts is a crap ton
Phrases like this can only be shaped by the combo of a misanthropic Brit having lived in the states.
Corvette suspension!
I’ve never lived in the US.
David would hate this thing, if only for its dual sin of an interference engine with an odiously short timing belt service interval of 30,000-40,000 miles, up to and including engine failure, whichever happened first.
Yugo, where engine failure is a desirable outcome.
They just keep coming
In college, a ‘friend’ asked me to help move some cars across states for his friend.
My ‘friend’ got to drive the Alfa Spider, I got stuck with the Yugo.
I had to drive that pile from northern Indiana to the mountains of North Carolina.
Amazingly, it made it, despite running at max rpm for hours on the interstates and then nearly burning the clutch out taking three tries to make it up the driveway of the new house that was at a 45 degree angle.
The giant moving truck that showed up the next day was able to make it up the driveway with no issue, except for nearly taking out the power line to the house.