Home » These Cadillac Taillights Seem To Have Become The Primary Choice Of Customizers

These Cadillac Taillights Seem To Have Become The Primary Choice Of Customizers

Caddytails Top

As I hope I have conveyed by my reporting here, the Global Taillight Scene is a bold and dynamic subculture, with so much going on at all times that it can be hard to read patterns and trends through all of the glowing red visual noise. But there definitely are trends and movements that happen. Some have a sudden rise to prominence and then a dramatic crash back to earth, like the Altezza taillight trend of the late ’90s to the 2000s, while other trends tend to stay slowly simmering in the background, slowly percolating into a sort of stable constant current of taillight activity. I think the use of late ’80s to early ‘2000s Cadillac taillights, specifically the DeVille thin vertical ones, definitely qualifies here, and perhaps may be one of the most significant taillight trends among the car customizer community. It’s time to talk about this, openly.

Are you familiar with these taillights? I bet you are, even if you’ve never actively thought about them or been involved in a spirited, drunk taillight bar debate about them. These are the type of taillights used on DeVille and Fleetwood Cadillacs, and are of a very narrow, vertical design, almost like slits of red light that fit into the still somewhat fin-like terminus of the car’s angled sides at the rear of the car. The basic concept first arrived with the third-generation Cadillac DeVille line in 1965, and remained, in basic concept, a design motif up until, well, today, as the current 2026 Cadillac Escalade, for example, uses vertical taillights that can trace their design lineage back to these legendary lights.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Here’s a little timeline of the evolution of these sharp, vertical lights from their earliest forms up until the early 90s variant that seems to be the one favored by customizers:

Caddytail Evo
Image: GM/Cadillac

By 1989, the basic essence of the taillamp had been distilled down into the most essential parts of its form: a glowing red slash, a controlled wound of light, minimalistic and elegant, with perhaps a hint of menace.

89caddy
Image: GM/Cadillac

This taillight was unashamedly monochrome, all red (well, European and other export market cars did have amber indicator sections) and with the reverse lamp left to do its thing somewhere else. I think it’s this extreme simplicity of form and shape that has made these taillights so appealing to customizers, as well as their minimal width, which makes them ideal for pickup truck customization use.

A simple Google search for “Caddy tails” reveals a trove of examples, including many videos showing people adapting these lights to pickup truck projects based on Chevy S-10s, Tahoes, Blazers, Volkswagen Rabbit pickups, and so many more. Here’s a couple of sample videos of garage customizers working these into their projects:

The variety of cars these lights seem to show up on is impressive; this is a collage of some examples, many from Facebook posts like this. I especially like the ones that rotate the lights horizontally or at an angle:

Caddytails Group
Images: Facebook, Marketplace, eBay

I’m also impressed someone managed to work these into a Beetle, as well. I think the majority of these swaps are for pickup trucks – you can even find these lights being sold on eBay specifically prepared for integration into custom pickup projects – but they’re a popular choice for many other types of custom projects.

The reasons why these taillights have found such thriving second lives on custom cars are interesting, I think, and speak to a certain common set of unspoken aesthetic rules for custom cars. Even though there’s never been any sort of official mandate, there’s a set of design parameters and a shared design vocabulary that a significant number of custom car projects fall into, and while it may be tricky to define verbally, I think most of us know it when we see it.

It’s a fairly distinct sort of look, and owes a lot of its origin and influence to the Lowrider community, specifically the dramatically simplified Lead Sled aesthetic. There’s some overlap with graffiti art as well, a kind of slick, minimalistic sort of design that, paradoxically, can still manage to be ornate. These lights, with their minimal profile and ability to nestle into narrow slits, are ideally suited to this sort of look.

I do believe at this moment in time and taillight culture, these Caddy taillights have to be among the most influential taillights currently in use right now. Others may have wider and more varied use, like the legendary Box Taillight, but that taillight’s broad use is due to utilitarian reasons; the Cadillac lights are a choice, a choice made based on aesthetic properties.

This is an impressive taillight achievement, and I hope the next time you find yourself driving behind a pair of these minimalistic ruby slits, you’ll take a moment to pause and really reflect on their bold minimalism and appreciate the way they’re being adapted to so many new and unexpected contexts.

Sometimes, my fellow taillight appreciators, a taillight quietly becomes a movement.

Top graphic image:

Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on whatsapp
WhatsApp
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
LinkedIn
Share on reddit
Reddit
Subscribe
Notify of
41 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
ADDvanced
ADDvanced
1 month ago

This has always and will always look like terrible because the design language of these lights is not cohesive with the design of the rest of the vehicles they are installed on. It will always be a great example of highly skilled fabricators ignoring the design process, and just diving into making something work instead of asking if it will ever look great in the first place.

FeRDNYC
FeRDNYC
1 month ago
Reply to  ADDvanced

The S10 Blazer looks almost OK. The rest, yeah, are largely abominations, and affronts to the automotive gods.

Moonball96
Member
Moonball96
1 month ago

Speaking of those Altezza lights… I absolutely put a set on my 96 Ranger back in the early 2000’s, and when the Lightning came out with factory ones, I got a set for my 02 F-150 flareside. While I still appreciate the looks of the Lightning lights, I shudder when I look at pics of my old Ranger with those lights…… what a time

Jatkat
Jatkat
1 month ago

I’ve always hated the look of these in conversions, while absolutely loving the look in stock form. Something about a nice skinny red taillight is just perfect to me.

Andy Individual
Andy Individual
1 month ago

I recall reading that the XLR taillights are unobtanium, presumably due to limited original production. I guess there were enough of these malaise crapillacs that there are plenty of old taillights in the scrapyards to play with.

Justin Thiel
Justin Thiel
1 month ago

my 96 Eldorado is still one of my favorite cars, it was sharp looking, pretty fast, and super comfy.

Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
1 month ago

That poor CRX. You monster.

It’s just awful.

Doughnaut
Member
Doughnaut
1 month ago

Not a single mention of C5 (and to a lesser extent C6 and C4) Corvette taillight conversions? If the Caddy’s are number one, the C5 lights are certainly a close 2nd.

Phuzz
Member
Phuzz
1 month ago

Volkswagen Rabbit pickups

I think calling the Golf a ‘Rabbit’ is a bit parochial, but also in this case, you’re missing out on one of the best automotive puns: The pickup/van version of the Golf is called the VW Caddy.

Logan
Logan
1 month ago

On a similar note, I remember pickup trucks (mostly but not only GM ones) and the occasional hot rod using post-ZR1 C4 taillights at car shows all over the place in the 1990s and early 2000s, and they’ve all basically vanished so thoroughly that it makes me wonder if I imagined the whole thing.

Last edited 1 month ago by Logan
Joe The Drummer
Joe The Drummer
1 month ago
Reply to  Logan

You did not. They were usually mounted into a custom rear valance that replaced the rear bumper, and the factory tail lights would be body filled.

Old Busted Hotness
Old Busted Hotness
1 month ago

I’ve always preferred the ’59 bullet style, especially frenched into the body.

RHM 31
RHM 31
1 month ago

My issue with them is they blatantly look like Cadillac lights added to what ever vehicle, most of those they don’t blend in or match the body curvature. I don’t see an improvement over what was there originally.

DNF
Member
DNF
1 month ago

Real customs use bent glass.

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
1 month ago

Ridden on the last 4. I bet pickup favorite because they fit well with the shape of their taillights. Also low Rider were always a fan of the car I lac lac lac

Mikebola
Mikebola
1 month ago

In my opinion, when you start to see them on multiple builds at a car show, they begin to lose their cool factor.
That happened about 15 years ago, for me.

FormerTXJeepGuy
Member
FormerTXJeepGuy
1 month ago

I wanted to put these on my S10 so bad in high school. I did not know how to weld yet, so it never happened.

Rob Stercraw
Rob Stercraw
1 month ago

Hell, I was pulling those Caddy tails for ebay sales when I first started selling on the platform in ’97.

Jack Trade
Member
Jack Trade
1 month ago

Also worth mention is Cadillac’s use of them on its current IMSA prototype class (GTP) hypercar.

They look amazingly futuristic, and now, the headlights more or less match, a look that’s porting to production cars in a win for everyone.

Alpscarver
Member
Alpscarver
1 month ago

Best taillights:
1) Round double twin, Ferrari 355
2) Boomerang, Maserati 3200 GT
3) Lancia Thesis

Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
1 month ago
Reply to  Alpscarver

I love quad round tail lights, like the F355, but I love them more when they aren’t just four big round lights, like the R32 Skyline, facelift mk2 MR2 and facelift FC RX7 (I still have my RX7 taillights).

Dr.Xyster
Dr.Xyster
1 month ago

Okay, I had to look it up, and the ones on the Beetle are amazing!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cl6CO3J-Yzc

Dan Parker
Dan Parker
1 month ago

Straight out of the mini-truckin’ playbook. Right up there with (down there with?) ZR1 tailights in the rollpan.

Last edited 1 month ago by Dan Parker
James McHenry
Member
James McHenry
1 month ago

I think I’ve seen a few of these in pickup beds. ‘S not a bad look. The vertical lines often suit a pickup bed. But many customizers have looked at a light from something in a junkyard and thought “man, that’d look sick on my build” for decades. Okay, the slang might be different than the ’60s but you get the picture…

…low-production supercar makers do this too but with less junkyard involved.

Maymar
Maymar
1 month ago

In addition to looking a little more dramatic, it’s also a standalone piece instead of something split by a trunklid (so it’s less beholden to going on something the same size and shape as what it started out on), and also there aren’t a ton of people dedicated to preserving FWD Cadillacs (a shame, I have a soft spot for the late 90’s DeVilles).

Hangover Grenade
Hangover Grenade
1 month ago

I put a set of those ’89 Caddy taillights on my Nissan Frontier. It also had a frenched license plate (at an angle no less), and custom paint.

“Was this a slammed mini-truck?” you might be asking yourself.

Nope. It was a lifted truck. With custom prerunner-style tube bumpers. And an exhaust stack. And Burt Reynolds painted on the side.

https://photos.fife.usercontent.google.com/pw/AP1GczNV0Vzakv2tJokdL62DO5pvEdxG1pL6KZ4hXjbZmwTXCYSh7zHEOS7p=w1314-h1314-s-no?authuser=0

I was a weird 30-year-old.

Last edited 1 month ago by Hangover Grenade
NewBalanceExtraWide
Member
NewBalanceExtraWide
1 month ago

I am both hating that your image link doesn’t work for me and worrying what kind of malware I just infected myself with because I slapped that link so hard wanting to see this. Weird is good.

Hangover Grenade
Hangover Grenade
1 month ago

Sorry, it was a link to my google photo album.

https://imgur.com/a/YG0HQTr

Eric Schliffka
Member
Eric Schliffka
1 month ago

OMG – You need to watch the Beaver Trilogy Part III… We will talk afterwards.

Joe The Drummer
Joe The Drummer
1 month ago

To quote Derek from Vice Grip Garage: I’ll bet I could drink a beer with you.

Doughnaut
Member
Doughnaut
1 month ago

Where’s a picture of the taillights?

Hangover Grenade
Hangover Grenade
1 month ago
Reply to  Doughnaut

Here ya go. Taillights and license plate.

https://imgur.com/a/h2f26wt

Alexander Moore
Alexander Moore
1 month ago
Tallestdwarf
Tallestdwarf
1 month ago

I was expecting imitation, but those are direct from the parts bin, huh?

…and they actually look good there, too!

Last edited 1 month ago by Tallestdwarf
LTDScott
Member
LTDScott
1 month ago

That’s true even for earlier models. I recently saw a 1996 Mitsuoka Galue here in California and it used tail lights from a late ’80s Cadillac Eldorado.

41
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x