“Volkswagen” means “people’s car.” This brand has survived war, oil crises, “dieselgate,” and now stands at the brink of the biggest transition — from internal combustion engines to electricity and autonomous driving. What will Volkswagen look like in 10-20 years? Can it maintain its “people’s” status or become a niche producer for the wealthy? We analyze strategies, technologies, and forecasts.
By 2030, Volkswagen plans for 80% of sales in Europe to be electric vehicles. The ID family (ID.3, ID.4, ID. Buzz) has already expanded. In 2026, the ID.2 — a budget electric car priced around 25,000 euros — will be released. This is an attempt to regain the title of “people’s.” Unlike the expensive ID.3, the new model will get a simpler finish but a modern battery. By 2035, VW will completely cease production of ICE vehicles in Europe (except for commercial vehicles). The transition in China and the US will be more gradual.
Volkswagen is investing billions in solid-state batteries (solid-state). The joint venture with QuantumScape promises batteries that charge to 80% in 12 minutes and do not explode upon impact. The first series solid-state batteries will appear in 2027-2028. By 2030, energy density will double, and the price will fall by 50%. This will make electric cars cheaper than gasoline ones. A range of 700-800 km will become the norm. Volkswagen is also building six “gigafactories” in Europe to be independent of China.
By 2026, Volkswagen will implement level 3 autonomous driving (conditional) in the ID. Buzz for commercial transport. The driver can watch a movie, but must take control upon request. By 2030, level 4 (highly automated) is expected on sedans and crossovers. This will allow sleeping in the car on the highway. VW is developing its own chip for processing data from cameras and lidars. In the future, you will be able to send your car for pizza or pick up your child from school.
The interior of the future is full-width screens, voice control with artificial intelligence, learning the driver’s preferences. But the main thing is the adaptive suspension that communicates with urban infrastructure (Car-to-X). The car learns about a pothole from the vehicle ahead and softens the impact. Or receives a signal about a traffic jam and reroutes. The interior will be modular: seats can be rotated, folded into a flat floor for camping.
After the success of ID.3 (golf class) and ID.4 (crossover), VW is preparing cars for those who do not need frills. ID.2 (hatchback) — a competitor to Renault 5 and Tesla Model 2. Range 450 km, power 170-200 hp. Price — 25,000 euros. Market launch — 2026. ID.1 (budget microcar) — even smaller, price around 20,000 euros, range 300 km. Production is likely to be in Spain or Turkey. The main task is to regain the market from Chinese electric vehicles (BYD, MG).
Golf — a legend. But in the era of electric vehicles, the ninth generation Golf will be electric. Production will continue, but from 2028. The design will be nostalgic, but with futuristic elements. Transporter (also T7) — will become electric, retaining the modular structure. Plans even for a fully autonomous Transporter for city deliveries without a driver. Diesel versions will only be sold in third-world countries. The Beetle (Beetle) may return as an electric retro car, but rumors are still rumors.
In China, VW is losing market share due to local brands (BYD, Nio). Therefore, in 2026, Volkswagen launches the sub-brand “ID. Neo” — electric vehicles developed specifically for China, with local software and design. They will be cheaper and more technologically advanced than European ones. At the same time, VW acquires stakes in Chinese startups (Xpeng, Leapmotor) to gain access to charging platforms and batteries. Europeans and Americans are unlikely to see these models — too different markets.
Volkswagen promises to make production carbon-neutral by 2030 for all its factories (the plant in Zwickau is already operating on renewable energy). Batteries are recycled (up to 90% of materials). Eco-leather, recycled plastic in the interior. By 2050, full carbon neutrality. This is marketing, but real changes. Future buyers will not only choose price but also environmental friendliness.
The future Volkswagen is not just cars. They are mobile devices, part of a smart city. If the company manages the transition, it will remain a giant. If not, it will be eaten by the Chinese. But for now, the odds are 50/50.
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