VW pulls Skoda brand from China after years of falling sales



Volkswagen will withdraw its mass-market car brand Skoda from mainland China after years of lacklustre sales, as international marques continue to lose their appeal in the world’s largest automotive market.

“Skoda Auto has realigned its global strategy to focus on growth markets such as India and the Asean region,” a Volkswagen spokesperson said on Thursday in a written response to the South China Morning Post, without denying earlier reports that the Czech brand would cease selling new vehicles by mid 2026.

China would remain “at the very core of Volkswagen Group’s strategy” the spokesperson said, adding that the company would continue to expand its portfolio in China with innovative products tailored to local needs.

The decision followed the exit of Japan’s Mitsubishi Motors, which announced in July that it was terminating its involvement in a joint venture in Shenyang, capital of northeast China’s Liaoning province, ending its operations in the country after more than 40 years.

Established in 1896, Skoda entered the Chinese market in 2005 through a partnership with SAIC Volkswagen. Following the 2007 launch of its first locally produced model, the Octavia, the brand leveraged Volkswagen’s technical platforms to position itself as an “affordable German-engineered” alternative.

By 2018, the brand reached its peak in China with about 341,000 deliveries, making China its largest market. At that time, it maintained a network of more than 500 dealers selling cars including the Octavia, Superb and Kodiaq.

  • Related Posts

    Chinese analogue chipmakers join wave of global price rises as mature-node firms eye gains

    A string of Chinese analogue chipmakers have announced price increases in step with their international peers, as a broader pricing wave sweeps across the semiconductor supply chain – a shift…

    Continue reading
    ByteDance bolsters Seedance 2.0 with watermarking, IP safeguards ahead of global roll-out

    ByteDance has bolstered its controversial video-generation model Seedance 2.0 with “advanced” watermarking and intellectual property (IP) protection guardrails ahead of its global roll-out, the TikTok owner has said. The much-anticipated…

    Continue reading

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *