I hate Beetles. That felt so good, I’m going to say it again. Beetles. I hate them. There. That was so cathartic I need a cigarette. Look, I can’t help being the pantomime villain around here. It’s why The Autopian hired me. Every great American cultural enterprise needs an evil mustache-twirling Brit chewing the literary scenery to elevate it above the horde, and it’s the role I was born to play.
Disliking Beetles (as opposed to The Beatles, whom I also hate) feels like an indefensible stance, unlike say, hating celery or the New England Patriots. Both are completely reasonable positions, and should you put them to a normal person, they’ll shrug their shoulders, agree with you, and get on with the rest of their day. Hating the single best-selling model of car ever made with legions of adoring fans speaks to a raging schism at the very core of my being. VW sold twenty-one and a half million of the bloody things, so that’s a lot of happy Beetle owners versus me. Maybe I’m a fundamentally broken person with a penchant for impossible odds.


My intense loathing for them is irrational, the purest kind of hatred. It just exists without explanation. It insists upon itself. Hating Beetles reminds me of being eight years old and being filled with the overwhelming urge to punch that pathetic kid in school who constantly forgot his gym kit and kept wetting himself. Picking on the Beetle is a new low, even for me. I started therapy recently, so let’s indulge in some here and see if we can figure out why I’m feeling these unfamiliar human emotions.
I Just Can’t Find Anything Redeeming About Them
Before we begin, I want to explain how I approach this tawdry business of writing about cars and car design. I try to cast out my own preconceptions and biases and figure out what’s important to the person who might be buying a particular car. It’s more nuanced than just saying a car is good or bad. There are no truly bad cars anymore. What’s important is whether a car works for its intended purpose and how it might fit into your life. When I’m wearing my car designer Fedora, I should be able to parse out the form and content of a car and place it in historical context. Why does this car exist in the form that it does? What circumstances led to its creation? What were the economic, engineering, or societal factors that influenced its final design? What I’m saying is I should be able to remove my visceral dislike of the ass engined Nazi staff car and dispassionately find something about it I can champion. Or at least construct into a two-thousand-word argument I can get paid for. But when it comes to the Beetle, I just can’t. It’s beyond my dubious talent as a writer and outside my makeup as a human being to say anything good about them without metaphorically crossing my fingers behind my back. I can’t do it.

The first memories I have of the crappy little things are from when I was young. My squishy and underdeveloped child brain couldn’t understand why Beetles didn’t look like any other car on the road. I knew they were called Volkswagens because I could read the badges on the back, and in my paltry collection of diecasts was a miniature souped-up version – number 31 in the Matchbox 1-75 range toy car fans. Pushing it around the seventies brown carpet the usual brum brum little car noises I made weren’t right because Beetles made an annoying ring-a-ding sound from their assholes that sounded like nothing else on the road. In my tiny head, Beetles were simply wrong at being a car. In time-honored working-class east London fashion, my bastard stepfather was a part-time kerbside cowboy mechanic for friends. One of his regular customers owned an orange Beetle 1303S. Apparently this was some sort of special and rare Beetle, which sounds like an oxymoron if ever I typed one. All I knew was it kept him in cash-in-hand work because it was always breaking down, and one night it caught fire. It’s possible he was as bad a mechanic as he was a father.

Clearly I’m transposing the trauma of my childhood onto the poor Beetle, and that’s why I can’t stand them. Except I don’t believe for one second that’s the case. It was all a very long time ago, and those scars , while still visible, have mostly healed over. But my passionate loathing for Beetles continues to rage unabated. My mate Beer Boy is big into drag racing. He’s always sending me pictures of Volkswagens that have gone all manner of wild transformation in the name of getting down the quarter mile as fast as possible, and no amount of alcohol injection or candy flake paint is going to change the fact that my reaction to these cars is that they are extremely stupid. He reminisced about owning a 400bhp Beetle that regularly caught other cars unawares. My reply to that was Beetles are so slow it takes 400bhp to make one move like a 200bhp car. They’re performance sucking vortex – gas goes in and that stupid spanners in a tumble dryer engine note is the only thing that comes out.
Man Of The People Doesn’t Like People’s Car
Putting a Beetle next to other drag machines is unfair. Let’s compare it to its contemporaries, the other classic post-war people’s cars. Despite all the grasping pretention and high-minded hot air I expel here I am very much homo populi. When the collapse comes, I’ll be joining my brothers and sisters around the brazier as we attempt to barbecue the last non-radioactive rat, not sitting in an ivory spaceship awaiting lift off to Mars. People’s cars are very close to my heart. Minis have a classless, bulldog puppy charm I’m slowly warming to. In true pretentious wanker fashion I can see myself writing a travelogue about waxing across the dunes of North Africa in a Renault 4. Although it’s a close run thing, the Fiat 500 is more appealing to me than Sophia Loren tumbling out of the kitchen with a plate of spaghetti, although admittedly, as classic transport, their total lack of speed renders them suitable only for local coffee runs.
Although notionally post-war cars, both the Beetle and the Citroen 2CV crucially had their engineering laid out pre-war. They both had compact space-saving torsion bar suspension, air-cooled boxer engines on the driven axle, and a platform chassis that facilitated the bolting on of alternate bodies. Like the Beetle, the 2CV also enjoyed an extended, decades-long production run – it didn’t leave the UK market until 1990. The 2CV is a French Beetle built the right way around. They’re a bit lentil soup and too much this week’s auto-journo fad for me, but I don’t viscerally despise 2CVs in the same way I do la Coccinelle. Let me put it this way – if you said you had a 2CV outside, I’d want a go. You’d have to force me into the driver’s seat of a Beetle at gunpoint – and it isn’t because the 2CV is French and the VW is German. Give me the choice of anywhere to live in Europe, and Germany would be top of the list. I would say Norway because it’s stunning and I have dear friends there, but have you seen what it costs to get a drink in Oslo? I’d be broke before I was plastered. Nope, it’s the land of currywurst, breakfast beer, unrestricted autobahns, and a thriving goth scene for me.

So it’s not nostalgia, the Beetle’s proletarian nature or its nationality that’s repelling me from them, nor the fact that they are epically slow. Despite my disparagement, the Beetle was designed around a clear set of Modernist design ideas. Although initially conceived by the world’s worst art school failure, it was designed by one of the greatest automotive minds of the time, Ferdinand Porsche. He had help forming the Beetle’s distinctive shape from aerodynamicist Paul Jaray and more than a little influence from Tatra, and, really, a whole set of other automotive engineers of the time. The ethos behind its creation was the ‘motorization of the German people’. According to ‘Fifty Cars That Changed The World’:
“Nevertheless, the Beetle was conceived, all at once, as a single integrated engineering solution with no ‘ad hoc’ solutions or ‘legacy’ components from earlier models. The body structure was superb, rigid, watertight and corrosion-resistant, and the quality of the mechanical parts was unusually high for a popular car. Germany’s preeminence in electromechanical engineering also meant that the electrical equipment (starter motor, ignition equipment and dynamo), often the Achilles’ heel of most budget cars at the time, was excellent, so a Beetle always started on cold, damp mornings. The VW’s success was a triumph of good engineering over questionable chassis design.”
Nobody Wanted To Build It
When the dust settled after the war most manufacturers had to resort to what they had been selling back in 1939. So in 1946 when the Beetle appeared it did have some advantages over the pre-war crocks everybody else was peddling. At the end of hostilities Wolfsburg came under British control and the British government tried to get domestic manufacturers interested in the weird device by giving away the car and the factory for nothing. Even at that bargain price, according to The Guardian Lord Rootes dismissed the Beetle for being too ugly and too noisy. I know how he felt. Eventually the British gave up trying to fob VW off and dumped it in the hands of Heinz Nordhoff, an ex-Opel director.
By the time the Fiat 600 and Mini appeared in 1955 and 1959 respectively the Beetle, in Europe at least, was starting to look pathetically out of date. But in the United States it became a protest vehicle driven by the sort of people who use plants for both eating and bathing. The Beetle’s simple ass-backwards engineering and homespun thriftiness was turned into a virtue against the conspicuously consumptive boats Harley Earl was designing. It achieved this counter-cultural sleight of hand with the help of a genuinely groundbreaking advertising campaign. Now I’m a sucker for a good advert and consider the best work to be high art as much as the next art school skin chimney but even those Doyle Dane Bernbach spots are not winning me over.

Over sixty-five years of production, VW did incrementally improve the car, introducing minor updates every year – far more than Citroen did with the 2CV or BMC et al did with the Mini. But the Volkswagen was conceptually still the same little obstreperous motorized saucepan lid in 2003 that it was in 1938. If longevity was a characteristic to be celebrated I laid out a particularly long turd down the U-bend this morning and I don’t see that appearing on t-shirts, having models made of it or celebratory parties being thrown with thousands of unwashed trust fund radicals in attendance. A Beetle is all the most miserable and undesirable things you don’t want in a car: they’re slow. They’re heroically ugly. They’re noisy. They have terrible rear suspension. The essentially similar 2CV at least has joie de vivre about it, a sense of Gallic fun epitomized by being on the door handles in a corner at 20 mph. Beetles are just sad sacks of spartan dourness – flaccid body work flopping drooping towards the tarmac and a generally pathetic demeanor, woefully coalesced into a hunchback of concentrated crapiness. There’s not one decent quality in a Beetle that I couldn’t get in another, more preferable car.

Twenty-one point five million Beetles. Think of all the congestion that could be eased and human hearing saved by destroying them all. The roads would be freer, quieter, and the world a much more beautiful place. Just leave me one chassis please, so when time and resources allow, I can build a goth Meyers Manx beach buggy. It doesn’t matter what year. They’re all the same damn car.
I would think that someone whose country’s last remaining automaker still makes its cars out of wood (with German engines) would be a bit gentler about certain aspects of the Beetle becoming outdated before the company that owns Bentley replaced it, in the 1970s, with fully monocoque FF liquid cooled cars.
Actually, upon a quick Google search to verify it looks like Morgan is owned by an Italian VC firm, so I have to correct myself and there is no last remaining UK automaker.
Anyway, outdated is a complicated topic with cars. Certain technologies are truly outdated, the best example I can think of is carburetors, but other technologies still work well even if they are old, or if there are more modern, “better”, replacements.
A good example of the latter is the de Dion axle on the Slate.
On the topic of rear suspensions, probably the worst design aspect of the Beetle, which I don’t believe this article even mentions, was the swing-axle rear suspension. But 1) that was corrected in 1968, and 2) the Beetle never made enough power to get in trouble with a swing-axle like a first-generation Corvair.
I have had (and still have) many, many cars from many manufacturers that span over 100 years of development.
No car, and I mean no car, makes me as happy to drive as a Beetle. For me, they are true automotive happiness and I love them for that experience alone.
The naming of it was truly great .. “The Beetle”. That personification based on the how the car looks was a (accidental?) masterstroke. Not sure if “The Rat” or the “The Larva” would have been runaway hits.
I grew up hating them. Learned that from my dad. I don’t mind them now, but certainly wont be first in line to drive one. I have memories of virtually suffocating in the back of them as a kid. I do however love a 2cv.
I am in the wrong article, switching to the one from Jason lol there is a reason why they were sold till 2003 in Mexico, they were outdated long time ago but you can find parts at 7-11 and fix it right there, don’t give a damn about the suspension because nothing will stop the car, when it rains it floods bad and guess what cars were the ones stuck first? All the “new” back then Opels and europeans Fords like the Mondeo couldn’t even touch the water but the Beetle? Nothing stopped that damn thing.
Even a open sewer doesn’t kill the car: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uFO_Np3mKnw
“Even a open sewer doesn’t kill the car”
An open sewer is shit’s home turf, so it should not be surprising that a Beetle would fare well…
Bitchiness can be a lot of fun.
I agree with Adrian that there are certain cars that evoke visceral, angry responses. For me, it’s the Ford Tempo/Mercury Topaz.
F**k those cars. If Nutriloaf was a car, it would be the Tempo/Topaz. If the Devil himself said “I need something to slowly sap the soul out of a person, and prolong the agony of living without joy”, he couldn’t do better than the Tempo/Topaz.
I remember reading a story circa 1986 about a little old lady who had a perfect, garage kept Mid 1950’s Ford. She took it to a dealership who somehow convinced her to swap it outright for a Tempo, as if they were doing her a favor. Those dirty f**kers. It would be a Tempo/Topaz…
I agree the original was highly outdated by the time I was able to drive, they are loud, and a death trap, but I appreciate seeing them on the road as it gives us variety, especially nowadays with all the amorphous blob crossovers on our roads.
It also spawned the New Beetle which is really coming back around, and the even newer Beetle, and the Ora Ballet Cat. I have similiar feelings about the Fiat 500/e and Mini Cooper, I like seeing the retro modern cars, some styles are fairly timeless like the Challenger looks good in the 60s and 2020s, and better than just generic style of the time.
I have opined extensviely on the brilliance of the modern Challenger.
Well I think we know what you should be driving to Goodwood now Adrian!
Stay tuned. There’s a possibility it might be worse. Much worse.
I also hate the Beetle, and the Beatles.
I had a 2CV as my first car, and it was slow and mostly terrible, but I loved it. There was a joy to it’s terribleness that the Beetle doesn’t have. Also how are Beetles that slow when they have more than double the engine of a 2CV?
I don’t hate all popular things, I like Transit vans, Capris, DSs (the Citroen not the brand), E30s, but the Beetle I hate more because I don’t understand why it’s so popular.
I haven’t read Torch’s reply to this article yet though. Torch’s love if the Beerle and his many, many articles on Beetle related content has made me more interested in them, but hasn’t made me not hate them.
Man-o-man, I could not agree more!
My head would be swimmimg within 20 minutes of riding in a Beetle as a child:
After yelling “Stop the car! I gotta barf!” on a few separate occasions times I vowed never to ride in one again.
4. Always the slowest cars on the road. Some Beetle drivers even appear to revel in the displeasure they cause others, as if its everyone else’s fault for being in such a rush.
Okay, but how do you Really Feel about them?
I’m not a huge fan either, but I can comprehend the appeal to some people, especially from a functionality perspective. They were cheap and reliable and easy to maintain with cheap ass parts available worldwide. I bet Jason makes some of the same points. Time to read his love letter.
(I was a big fan of Herbie so I guess I caught the bug too)
Yep. Worst exhaust note ever. I’d prefer a 2 stroke weed eater. Even an Iron Dookie with a fart can exhaust.
Some of my earliest memories are of being in the wornout backseat of my dad’s beetle getting poked by the seat springs. That thing had a smell to it that I’ll never forget..weed, old vinyl, and pipe tobacco smoke. We once drove from San Jose, CA down to LA with a broken starter. I distinctly remember my dad push starting that thing in Disneyland’s parking lot.
So yeah, no thanks, I don’t hate them but I want nothing to do with them.
Why would you want to punch the kid who wet himself? Kinda weird.
James May did the “I hate the Beetle” bit in 2002. It’s tired. I don’t like the Beetle either but it’s an important car in spite of itself.
Yes but James May is worth millions and I’m not, so I have to come up with tired takes all the time.
“Brit chewing the literary scenery ”
Ha, funny, one’d think that you leaning into your Britishness might actually make you receptive about having a modicum of appreciation for the Beetle given how it was so vigorously resuscitated in the aftermath of WWII by the British, including most notably a British Army officer and engineer named Ivan Hirst, thereby making it indeed a most British endeavor (endeavour, if you will) before it was turned back over to the Germans.
“Nobody Wanted To Build It”
Bear in mind that so much of the factory was still in ruins after being bombed during the war so not many people were eager to take on the task of reviving such severely moribund manufacturing, especially when the prospective product was so thoroughly unfamiliar to so many people.
As for Lord Rootes’s dismissive appraisal of the Beetle as “too ugly” remember that this time period was not at all far removed from when Chrysler tried an aerodynamic design with the Airflow of 1934-’37 with such abysmal reception from the public so it’s not surprising about such contemporary reactions to the Beetle’s designs in the beginning.
Yeah, you’re eminently entitled to your opinions but it’d be interesting to see what happens if you were to get in some serious quality driving time with a Beetle. Much like the old saying about jacks of all trades, the Beetle actually does at least moderately well in so many areas without being absolutely excellent or even just merely excellent in any one area. In fact, when it comes down to brass tacks, the Beetle ends up being greater than the sum of its parts.
Giving away things just as they’re about to become ludicrously profitable is a uniquely British endeavour too, especially since WW2.
Hello? Being British means we constantly shoot ourselves in the foot.
Ha. Would that help explain the popularity of Britain’s own Doc Martens boots with their perceived bulletproof qualities?
You are quite the wordsmith, Adrian. You are the best art school skin chimney the Autopian could ask for.
Well I like to think so.
I grew out of them probably not much older than a toddler, when I realized they were just (then) ubiquitous, annoying junk and that there were other options for cars to like in opposition to my father’s like for tri-Chevies and shitty trailer queen show rods. There were the Herbie movies I liked, but they mostly seemed to illustrate how ugly the Beetle was with all the other far cooler cars they included in it. When I learned the history, my disregard became more disdain. I love this site, so it’s funny that two of the iconic cars I dislike most and do not understand the affection for are the Beetle and Jeep Wrangler in any of its permutations, though at least I appreciate the history of the latter.
Read Thinking Small and get back to us on that last point.
I don’t see how that changes anything here. I’m not going to suddenly like an overpriced, under-built, fuel-eating, ugly, terrible-driving POS under constant recalls.
I don’t care about the beetle one way or another, but that was brilliant.
Re. Best selling car: is that true? A quick google search suggests the corolla has sold 40+ million.
The Corolla is the best selling badge stuck on a car, but those cars have been wildly different. Coupes, hatches, estates, saloons, RWD, FWD, transverse or longitudinal engines.
Whereas all Beetles are 1930’s based turds that look like nothing significant has changed for the entire production run.
Adrian, what’s your take on other variants of the Beetle platform, such as the Karman Ghia, Brasilia and Type 3 models?
*Hank Scorpio flamethrower gif*
I completely agree Adrian. Both on the Volkswagen and the The Beatles.
This is a quality rant and I support your views because objectively the Beetle is slow and noisy with tricky handling, horrible crash safety and a crap heater. Realistically the rear engine designs that were all the rage in the 50s and 60s should have put out to pasture in the 70s after BMC and Fiat showed the right way to build small cars. Both VW and Citroën had better cars, a Golf or a Visa were modern and didn’t make funny noises.
Don’t hold back, Adrian. Tell us what you really think of the Beetle.
Hear me and hear me well. The day will come – oh, yes, mark my words, Torchinsky your day of reckoning is coming, when an evil wind will blow through your little play world and wipe that smug smile off your face. And I’ll be there in all my glory, watching, watching as it all comes crumbling down!
I agree never a beetle fan except rail buggy
The shit Adrian Clarke is too cool for I could just about squeeze into the Grand fucking Canyon.
Stay golden, Autopian.
That should be on an Autopian tee shirt tbh.
Oddly enough, I feel about the same way for the 2CV as you do for the Beetle.
That French monstrosity has never had any appeal to me, either aesthetically or mechanically. It’s an over engineered abomination that has no reason to exist.
Okay, rant over (and to each their own).
More seriously, they were very different solutions to the same problem. It is interesting how each seems to represent the culture that created them. I guess I just have greater appreciation for that era of German engineering. (In the current generation, they seem to have lost the plot and now make things way more complicated than they should be.)
The 2 CV is over engineered in the same way Stalin was progressive.
Fair point. You’re right – “over engineered” is the wrong term.
I just don’t have an appreciation for the engineering solutions they came up with. The German solutions seemed pretty solid and made sense to me. The French solutions were always more of a head scratcher.
No argument from me. The 2CV is a bizarre little thing.
I’ve driven a 2CV across a ploughed field, as was its design brief. It does that one thing very well. It is objectively terrible as a road car.
Have you driven a 2cv? The thing i appreciate about a 2CV is they actually brought innovation to it. They had the ambition to bring new solutions to a cheap ass car – the clever and super effective yet simple suspension (rides better than basically anything), fwd, rack and pinion steering, ease of assembly/disassembly, removable chairs, such joyous engine and gearchange. The Beetle isn’t that much different from any dour prewar car in design and engineering solutions and mostly a ripoff of the Tatra that should’ve been built 15years prior.
There’s this american idea french=weird for no reason, that couldn’t be further from the truth regarding the 2cv.
I have not had the opportunity to drive one. I have seen videos of it driving through plowed fields and other ridiculous terrain (as Captain Muppet mentioned, the target it was engineered for), schematics and various other analyses of its mechanics.
Perhaps my issue with it is they placed too much emphasis on being able to handle those plowed fields, and not enough on it being a competent road car. I guess I’m disappointed in it for what it isn’t, rather than being impressed with it for what it is.
Other than the door handles rubbing the ground around a tight corner, I’ve not read much to suggest that they’re not good on the road.
Um, yeah… I think it’s that door handles rubbing the ground thing that I take issue with. 🙂
I don’t agree, but I think we all have something we hate that we can’t quite justify. Sometimes you’re just a hater.
This is some grade A hate though. Real sticky. I had a great time, no notes.