The global auto industry is entering a new phase of self-reflection. After Toyota recently acknowledged that managing an increasingly complex product portfolio has become a challenge, Volkswagen appears to be reaching a similar conclusion.
For decades, automakers expanded their lineups to cover every possible customer niche. Today, however, the realities of electrification, rising development costs, software investments, and intensifying competition are forcing manufacturers to rethink that strategy. Volkswagen is now among the latest carmakers evaluating whether having too many models is doing more harm than good.
A Portfolio That Has Grown Too Large
Volkswagen’s global range stretches across compact hatchbacks, sedans, SUVs, electric vehicles, performance models, and market-specific products. The brand also operates in vastly different regions, including Europe, China, North America, and emerging markets, each with unique customer demands.
While a broad portfolio helps attract more buyers, it also creates significant complexity. Every additional model requires engineering resources, supplier networks, manufacturing capacity, marketing budgets, and software support.
Industry analysts note that automakers are increasingly questioning whether every vehicle in their lineup justifies its existence, particularly when some models sell in relatively small numbers.
The recent uncertainty surrounding niche products such as the T-Roc Cabrio in Europe highlights the challenge of maintaining low-volume vehicles in an environment where efficiency is becoming critical.
The Cost of Complexity
The automotive business is undergoing one of the most expensive transitions in its history.
Manufacturers are investing billions into electric vehicle platforms, battery technology, connected-car systems, and advanced driver-assistance software. At the same time, demand patterns are shifting rapidly across different regions.
Volkswagen continues to expand its EV ambitions, especially in China, where it plans an aggressive rollout of new electric and hybrid models tailored to local buyers. The company has previously outlined plans for dozens of new energy vehicles over the coming years.
However, launching more vehicles while simultaneously reducing costs creates a difficult balancing act. Many industry executives now believe that fewer, stronger products can generate better returns than maintaining a sprawling lineup with overlapping offerings.
Following a Wider Industry Trend
Volkswagen is not alone in reassessing its product strategy.
Across the industry, automakers are trimming underperforming models, delaying certain EV programs, and prioritizing vehicles with stronger sales potential. Rising competition from Chinese manufacturers and softer-than-expected EV demand in some markets have added pressure to improve profitability.
Toyota has already signaled similar concerns about lineup complexity. Now Volkswagen appears to be confronting the same reality: consumers may appreciate choice, but too much choice can become expensive for manufacturers.
What It Means for Buyers
For customers, a leaner Volkswagen lineup could actually be good news.
Rather than spreading resources across dozens of models, the company could focus on improving its most successful vehicles, enhancing quality, accelerating software updates, and delivering better ownership experiences.
Popular nameplates are unlikely to disappear. Instead, future product strategies may prioritize fewer platforms, clearer positioning, and stronger differentiation between models.
As the industry moves deeper into the electric era, efficiency is becoming just as important as innovation. Volkswagen’s recognition that it may have too many models reflects a broader shift taking place across the automotive world.
The age of endless expansion may be ending. The next competitive advantage could be knowing exactly which vehicles deserve to stay.




