It was three weeks ago when Volkswagen CEO Oliver Blume told investors the global automaker’s business model is broken and needs fundamental restructuring that includes 50,000 job cuts by 2030. Media reports the following week suggested VW actually planned to eliminate up to 100,000 jobs while ending production at four German plants. There was even talk about Volkswagen the car company being spun off from Volkswagen the conglomerate.
This week, Blume presented more restructuring details to the VW Supervisory Board behind closed doors. While the official meeting recap sheds no light on plant closures, job cuts, or spin-offs, it does spell out a critical strategy that could help the bottom line and simplify car buying, but also might leave shoppers without some of their favorite features.
Fewer Models, Fewer Options. A Lot Fewer
Volkswagen Golf GTI Edition 50Johnson Chen/CarBuzz/Valnet
Across its eight vehicle brands, Volkswagen Group plans to streamline its model lineup by up to 50% while the automaker concentrates “on the most attractive market segments.” That’s already been happening in the US, with the departure of the Passat, Beetle, base Golf hatchback, and the ID.4 over several years. Might the compact Jetta sedan also be on the bubble? Its second-quarter sales were decent – 15,949 units, up nearly 10% and the No.3 seller behind the Tiguan and Atlas.
Perhaps the compact Taos crossover is getting a closer look, with second-quarter US sales down nearly 44% to 7,794 units. And will ID. Buzz really return to the US for the 2027 model year?
Stripping Down VW Group Vehicles
2027 Volkswagen Atlas Live Image New York Auto ShowBrett Evans / CarBuzz / Valnet
While the VW Group’s model lineup is slated to be cut in half, the impact will be even greater on shoppers as the automaker wants to simplify “offering complexity” by reducing the number of available equipment options by up to 75%.
“This allows investments and development resources to be focused on the products and technologies that deliver the greatest added value for customers and the highest value contribution to the Group.”
While simplifying the purchase process makes sense, this is risky if shoppers are forced to spend more on an equipment package just to get a particular feature they would rather pay for as a stand-alone option. It seems doubtful that VW Group wants to de-content vehicles because savvy shoppers will recognize that stripped-down vehicles are less attractive and less competitive.
Volkswagen ID.Tiguan Spy photoCarBuzz/Valnet
The bigger question is how this strategy works across all eight brands, from SEAT, Škoda, and VW to Bentley, Porsche, Lamborghini, and Audi. Exclusive brands aren’t going to limit ways for wealthy customers to spend their millions, but VW Group says “streamlining” also means harmonizing platforms, electronic architectures, and software to meet global requirements. The goal is to find “Group-wide synergies” and “eliminate technological parallel structures,” while focusing on “clear customer benefits.”
Related
VW Group Launching 20 New Models This Year Despite Massive Job Cuts
CEO Oliver Blume warns of a ‘tense and demanding’ situation as the company faces geopolitical crises, tariffs, and disrupted markets.
Sales Are Down For Every Brand, Except Škoda
At the plant level, VW Group has too much capacity. The automaker was gearing up to produce 12 million vehicles before the COVID-19 pandemic hit, but the cross-brand target now is a “demand-appropriate” nine million units per year, after two million units of capacity have already been removed. “Further steps will follow in China and Europe,” the automaker says, while also promising “leaner management structures.”
For perspective, Volkswagen Group reached its production peak in 2018, with 11 million vehicles produced worldwide, but that tally trailed off to 8.8 million in 2025.
The all-electric Volkswagen ID Buzz GTZ not only looks cool, it also has 335 hp in the game.Volkswagen
To better understand the panic in Wolfsburg, the first-half 2026 sales chart is utterly downbeat, with every brand sector down at least 5.9%. From entry-level to luxury, every brand sold fewer cars. Porsche was down 16.5%; Bentley down 13.6%, and VW brand down 10.9%. The only group brand showing positive movement was Škoda, up 8.1%.
VW Group Deliveries by Brand
Jan. – Jun. 2026
Jan. – Jun. 2025
% Change
Brand Group Core
3,115,000
3,311,800
-5.9
Volkswagen Passenger Cars
2,067,500
2,320,300
-10.9
Škoda
555,700
509,400
+9.1
SEAT/CUPRA
299,700
302,600
-1.0
Brand Group Progressive
736,900
794,100
-7.2
Audi
727,200
783,500
-7.2
Bentley
4,200
4,900
-13.6
Lamborghini
5,400
5,700
-4.6
Brand Group Sport Luxury
122,300
146,400
-16.5
Porsche
122,300
146,400
-16.5
Volkswagen Group (total)
4,125,700
4,405,400
-6.3
VW Group’s regional performance was a mixed bag in terms of first-half sales. Western Europe, the automaker’s No.1 market, was up 2.9% to 1.7 million vehicles, while sales in Central and Eastern Europe (292,600 units) and South America (327,200 units) were up at least 7.2%. But the years of three or even four million VW Group vehicles sold in China are gone: First half sales were down 25.9%, to less than a million. And North America remains a struggle, with first-half sales down 3.1% to 447,500 units, impacted by Trump administration tariffs.
volkswagen id polo gtiVolkswagen
VW Group Deliveries by Region
Jan. – Jun. 2026
Jan. – Jun. 2025
% Change
Western Europe
1,748,400
1,698,600
+2.9
Central and Eastern Europe
292,600
273,100
+7.2
North America
447,500
461,900
-3.1
South America
327,200
302,100
+8.3
China
973,000
1,313,800
-25.9
Rest of Asia-Pacific
145,300
157,200
-7.5
Middle East/Africa
191,700
198,800
-3.6
World
4,125,700
4,405,400
-6.3
CarBuzz Insight – Why This Matters:
VW CEO Oliver Blume and his team face tough decisions over the next few years. If Blume succeeds with his goal of making VW Group “the most attractive automotive company in the world” by 2030, it’s difficult to see how that happens and what that company actually looks like. Toyota is awfully attractive right now as the world’s No.1 automaker, and it doesn’t even own iconic brands like Porsche or Lambo.
Related
VW’s Extreme Cost-Cutting Casualties Could Go From Bad To Worse
VW Group is facing a perfect storm that has been treacherous to navigate. Beyond plant closures, the core VW brand could be spun off, reports say.
If VW wants to be more like Toyota, then it needs to laser focus on efficiency and delivering great product priced right, in every vehicle segment, from compact cars and luxury crossovers to people movers and hybrids. If there’s still money to launch the Scout brand in the US, then the VW Group will finally have a pickup truck here, which could make a difference. VW Group remains a top seller in China, and it’s No.1 in Europe, and that’s something to build on.
