There’s an entire generation of the Western world that knows Volvo as a wagon company. As my colleague Thomas Hundal pointed out back in March, the brand and the bodystyle are culturally intertwined, with cars like the iconic 240 seared into people’s brains as the go-to runabout for New England’s yuppie crowd and college professors nationwide.
Though the public’s perception of the station wagon has shifted drastically since the 240’s debut, Volvo’s desire to sell wagons to Americans persisted all the way up until this year, when it finally pulled the V60 and the V90 Cross Country from U.S. dealers. The regular V90 was discontinued for America in 2021, and now, both variants are dead globally. That leaves just the V60 as Volvo’s last remaining wagon. How times change.


The V90 has been around since 2016 in its current form, but its roots can be traced back all the way to the ’90s, when Volvo sold its executive-sized wagon under a different name: 960. By 1996, the wagon version of that car had been renamed the V90, before going out of production just two years later. As before, the current V90 shared its bones with its S90 sedan counterpart (a car that was also discontinued for the U.S. earlier this year).

While it’s incredibly sad to see yet another wagon bite the dust, I can’t say I’m terribly surprised. Wagons have been out of fashion for years now, with the vast majority of automakers abandoning the bodystyle altogether. The only reason Volvo was still able to sell wagons in the U.S. was by copying Subaru’s Outback strategy – in 2005, it raised the ride height and added plastic body cladding to the Volvo V70, creating the XC70 Cross Country. This strategy lasted for years, extending to the V60 and V90.

But even Volvo SUV-ifiying its wagons couldn’t save them. Sales of the V60 and V90 were absolutely minuscule last year in the U.S., representing only a tiny fraction (2%) of all Volvo sales. Specifically, Volvo sold just 532 V90 Cross Countries in all of 2024. People just don’t want wagons unless they’re high-performance Autobahn bruisers.
It wasn’t just in America where the V90 floundered in sales. Volvo only sold 9,939 V90s and V90 Cross Countries globally last year, representing 1.3% of all sales.
The last V90 rolled off its assembly line in Torslanda, Sweden sometime last month, according to the Volvo Cars Heritage division. Instead of being unceremoniously sold away to a private owner, it’ll be retained by Volvo and kept at the World of Volvo Museum, located in central Gothenburg. If you want to pay tribute to Volvo’s vast wagon history, you’ll find it sitting alongside cars like the P220, the 960, and my personal favorite, the 145 (pictured below).

As Volvo points out in its announcement of the V90’s demise, you still have some time to buy a new V90 if you really want one, as there are still a few Cross Country models sitting unsold at dealerships across the U.S. (54 cars, according to a quick nationwide search on Cars.com). It could be your last chance to buy a new big, European-built wagon that isn’t a turbocharged German rocketship for a long, long time.
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I was a Certified Volvo Nut™ for 20 years, and they lost me when the V90 RWD was ended in 1997. So this isn’t a loss to me.
If anyone wants me to bring one back from CA to the east coast for them, I’m looking for an excuse to do a road trip after visiting a friend in San Diego. I haven’t found anything I’m interested in buying yet, but wouldn’t mind driving a Volvo wagon cross-country.
I almost bought a V90 five years ago. The twin charged engine scared me off and I bought a used E350 wagon.Still, sad that Volvo wagons are waning.
And this is why Volvo lost me as a customer when I traded in my XC70 in 2023.
I wanted an EV wagon. The closest I could get was my EV6. And I do love my EV6, but I miss the practicality of my Volvo. Even though it was not the most reliable vehicle I’ve ever owned.
If Volvo made an EV wagon it would be in my garage right now. Instead we sold our V60 and got into a ZDX lease.
Surely you mean the r/cars special, a manual AWD wagon with adaptive cruise and wireless Carplay/Android Auto.
Well shite, now I’m annoyed. I sniffed around at these back when the ability to buy a regular, non-cross country wagon was ending. Seeing those pics of the final V90 really makes me wish I had one in my driveway, dagnabbit.
I’d bet Volvo being owned by Chinese Geely has something to do with it. It’s certainly why I don’t consider them anymore, despite a love for Wagons.
I would say the price has a lot to do with it they start at like 55k+
“They’re boxy but they’re good.”
The XC90 and XC60 are, still, wagons.
Don’t let the marketing fool you
The Volvo that we all grew up with is not the Volvo of today.
I’m sick of people acting like it’s still a Swedish car maker as we all remember that old hippy girlfriend with her 90s-era Volvo wagon and that hell of a back seat. The Volvo had a nice back seat too.
All of this has happened before and will happen again. Wagons, ho!
— Wagon Ho
I’ve wanted a Volvo 240 pretty much since I rode in one as a kid. Never owned one though. Now at 48 I could probably get a new Volvo wagon but when I visited the dealer the salesperson said the controls were “intuitive like your phone” and then proceeded to have to press the single center button 3x before it responded. Done and done. Nope. It was a beautiful, powerful wagon ruined by a crap infotainment and control ipad in the dash. I much prefer knobs and cars that are engaging and not just software devices on wheels. Last time I mentioned the dash issue, I got flack from Volvo fans. But now maybe they are Geely fans since it’s not even really Swedish anymore right?
Pour out an aquavit for the Swedish wagons that are no longer with us.
I am so looking forward to the future where everything is a crossover/suv blob. All this does is prove the point that people have the worst fucking taste.
there is some really shitty roads around where i live i can get everywhere in my prius but only barely. installing a 1.5 inch lift on it this winter to fix that but most people don’t want to have to modify their vehicles. I wish lifted cars / wagons were more of a thing but i guess thats essentially all a crossover is anyway.
I get the whole shitty roads thing, but at the same time, smash and grab break-ins are so common in some areas that it seems like there would be some drift back towards sedans solely to have a lockable trunk that you can’t see into. I know I moved back to a sedan for daily use after my truck got broken into for a bag in the backseat (even with very dark tinted windows).
the lockable trunk thing only offers you the illusion of safety. if you get access to the front door you can pop the trunk. most vehicles don’t have valet locks on the trunk.
True, but it does slow them down slightly, which in some areas is enough to make them move on to that SUV next to me.
Additionally, I think we see higher instances of stolen catalytic converters on the crossovers. That could be mitigated with different design, but when they’re just in the middle of the exhaust system, they are easier to grab when that extra clearance is available.
other than random tweekers the catalytic converter theft seems to be targeted specifically at vehicles that have the most accessible cats like pickup trucks. or vehicles that have particularly valuable converters like the prius.
I was hoping Volvo would have an EV wagon at some point in the US but it seems as time goes on the wagon will not be around much longer.
As a former Volvo wagon owner – it’s a damned shame.
Wagons are the perfect form factor – whether ICE or EV.
As someone who shopped a V60, the roofline tapered so significantly, that the Golf Wagon felt it had far more useable space.
Aye