Home » Volvo, The Company Known For Its Wagons, Is Down To Just One Wagon

Volvo, The Company Known For Its Wagons, Is Down To Just One Wagon

Last Volvo V90 2 Ts2
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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.

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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).

The Final V90 Rolls Off The Line At The Volvo Cars Torslanda Plant.
The final V90 next to its ancestors. Source: Volvo

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.

Last Volvo V90 Int
Source: Volvo

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.

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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).

Screenshot 2025 10 09 At 5.11.23 pm
Isn’t it pretty? Source: Volvo

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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Matti Sillanpää
Matti Sillanpää
13 days ago

In my side of the pond, they still have full lineup. And I kinda want and V90. But man the phev power train is a turd. And I’m not even talking about the first gen T8 with turbo and supercharger + EV, but the current improved one. I who ever signed up and said “good enough” needs to be fired and banned ever from working in the industry ever again.

In my 27 years of driving, about 700tkm and trying quite many cars(~100), I’ve never driven as unpredictable powertrain. One doesn’t even know where and how it puts the power. My co-worker described it as dangerous after having it for almost 3 years. when you floor it as nothing happens, and then all hell brakes loose. Winter conditions especially (like when I drove it), makes it especially obvious. Even with studded tyres, first the front skids, then it puts power in the back after like second, then it lauches, squirms, does all kinds of weird shit. Then next time it holds back the power suddenly as there’s not enough battery. And accelerating in curve, like motorway ramp is even sketchier.

Sure there’s electric safetynet in the background making sure everything is OK, but it doesn’t feel natural. It feels like you are leaning into something that should be a backup, not a routine.

Yoboi
Member
Yoboi
13 days ago

I owned a 24 V60 Polestar, awful car. Steering was numb and lacked feel but also wasn’t direct, worst of all worlds. The suspension was cool but I prefer magnaride to coilovers on a car like that. The reason I sold it was the lane keep assist was NOT possible to fully disable, nor the auto braking, and I had enough phantom braking and car tugging me into a lane that I sold it. The seats were wonderfully comfortable and the interior was great. Handling-wise, it was whatever, uninspiring FWD based AWD.

Yoboi
Member
Yoboi
13 days ago
Reply to  Yoboi

I also have experience with the RS6 and E63S wagon, and the price increase on those is justified, as they at least handle well and have some real pizzazz/character. But wagons are compromised driving experiences; you feel the weight when pushing hard, especially in the rear. On the V60 Polestar, the cool part about the coilovers is you could set it up to try and rotate by playing with the damper settings. Even then, you CANNOT disable traction, so it would cut power/slip. Horrific software on an otherwise decent car.

Yoboi
Member
Yoboi
13 days ago
Reply to  Yoboi

Oh, and compared to the inline 6’s from BMW at a comparable price, the 4 cylinder PHEV in the V60 Polestar was gravely and felt straight out of a car half the price, and didn’t even accelerate that fast for what it was. Overall, just a mediocre car with awful software and pointless gimmicks.

Last edited 13 days ago by Yoboi
Stef Schrader
Member
Stef Schrader
13 days ago

How the mighty have fallen. 🙁

The past few Volvo testers I’ve been in have just been deeply irritating, especially when it comes to infuriating controls. I think the C40 Recharge may have the tiniest screen text out of any vehicle I’ve ever had the misfortune to encounter. Maybe the solution to Volvo is to build good cars again?

Last edited 13 days ago by Stef Schrader
Bill C
Bill C
13 days ago

It’s still a beautiful car. I just returned from 2 weeks in DK, A, & D. I happened upon a carshow taking place in front of Vienna City Hall, which displayed an Audi A6 e-Tron Avant, and some other wagons beasts. On the more affordable end of the spectrum, I like all the wagons Skoda offers, and they had a very nice Superb Combi, might have been a hybrid.

Mike B
Mike B
13 days ago

I think these are gorgeous and it’s sad to see them go. As a P2 XC70 owner, I was blown away when this new style debuted. Every once in a while, I check out the used market, but these things are still fairly pricey and the complexity of the motor scares me off.

I really should start looking for a clean T6 P3.

Scott
Member
Scott
13 days ago
Reply to  Mike B

As a multi-Volvo owner, the complexity of their newer cars is off-putting to me too. They look very nice, but twin-charging, and hybrids of modest achievement, and all that software really doesn’t tempt me to dip my toe in that particular pool.

I know that there are no simple, servicable, cheap-to-own-long-term cars made anymore (well, at least not any mainstream cars sold in the states). It really blunts the appeal of most new cars to me… I’m ready and willing and able to buy something new (not that I need it with the three and a half cars I currently own… the half being a motorcycle) but the idea of owning something new isn’t appealing enough to offset the potential downsides.

And I really like Volvo. I know it’s just a brand: a marketing construct for the most part, and I know they don’t care what I think, but I still like them.

A snapshot I just took minutes ago of my sun-baked 240 wagon in the driveway, parked behind its 20-year-younger cousin XC90 (which is itself over 20 years old).

https://imgur.com/a/aI6MI6N

Last edited 13 days ago by Scott
It's Pronounced Porch-ah
Member
It's Pronounced Porch-ah
13 days ago

I shopped v90 wagons and the Buick Regal Tourx before buying my last car. I really wanted a wagon, but was scared off by forum posts. In hindsight, it was stupid because those with issues are always more vocal, but in the end, I was freaked out and local inventory was non-existent.

I am trying to rectify our current hatchback/wagon deficit when we replace our next car, but my fiancée has a strong preference for sedans.

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