RE: Suzuki calls time on Swift Sport, Jimny and more

RE: Suzuki calls time on Swift Sport, Jimny and more

Friday 28th June

Suzuki calls time on Swift Sport, Jimny and more

Suzuki's lively combustion era is drawing to a close in the UK. The cull is brutal


As part of its push to full electrification, Suzuki UK has announced a streamlining of its range ahead of its first EV going on sale. And if you’re thinking that means the end of the fun Suzukis, then right now that seems absolutely the case: by the beginning of next year - or sooner if there’s a rush on existing stock - the Ignis, Swift Sport and Jimny LCV will be gone, never to return. Small sellers, yes, and perhaps not as seismic as the end of the Ford Fiesta, though yet more compact, light, relatively simple cars that won’t exist for much longer.

Fun ones, too, let’s not forget. Hybridisation made the Swift Sport more expensive than hoped for, though it was still a 1,000kg, six-speed manual pocket rocket that’d put a smile on your face. Prior to that, it was for a decade and two generations the go-to junior hot hatch for anyone wanting old-school thrills with modern convenience. The Mk1 was a real giggle as well as great value, which the second generation only added to with a much-needed sixth gear, the option of five doors and a preference for super unleaded rather than a dependence. With a fine little chassis, loads of standard kit and pert good looks, the Mk2 Swift Sport really hit the spot - it was preferable to the Fiesta Zetec S at £15k or less. There'd be far worse ways to spend £5k on a used car now, which is why the end of the nameplate means so much. And the fact that, to its credit, Suzuki persevered for so long.

Elsewhere, the Ignis was all the city car anyone would ever need. And enough has been said about the current Jimny’s charms over the past few years to know why it’ll be missed. As they depart, the Swift Sport, Ignis and Jimny leave behind an all-hybrid lineup of Swace, standard Swift, Vitara, S-Cross and Across PHEV. Bravo if you could identify all of those. As for what comes next, Suzuki has said nothing more than its first electric vehicle will be introduced ‘later this year’ with additional ones coming between now and 2030. ‘Suzuki is in preparation to transition the brand and its dealer network to fully comply with all UK and EU legislation and will streamline its model range from the end of this year’, reads the press release. 

Despite the imminent loss of those models, Suzuki says it expects to see similar sales volumes in the UK and Republic of Ireland for 2024 as was in 2023. The seven-year warranty introduced last year remains in place, too, so a buyer picking up one of the final Swift Sports with a combustion engine (we can but hope it’ll return as an Alpine A290 EV rival) will be warrantied into the 2030s. Imagine what the Suzuki lineup might look like by then. Interestingly enough there are a few 2024-registered examples of the cars set to go out there, including half a dozen Jimny Commercials - some with rear seat conversions already - and a smart little Ignis for less even than a Dacia Spring will cost. The best PH can currently do on Swift Sports is this red, 3k-mile, 2023 car, but then it does have £6k off the new price. The time really is now - there won’t be Suzukis like them again.


Author
Discussion

patmahe

Original Poster:

5,780 posts

207 months

I really hope Suzuki manage to recapture the fun small car side of things as we move through the hybrid/electric era. For me it's what they've always done best, and under-rated company that manage to build small likeable reliable cars with bags of character, sad that the most interesting cars in their lineup are the ones facing the cull.

TwigtheWonderkid

43,863 posts

153 months

A real shame the latest Jimny never came with a soft top option.

cannedrex2406

8 posts

52 months

Not the Jimny frown


although on another note, Suzuki is still doing well making affordable cheap cars that are pretty good.

For ex: the S-cross is a proper midsize crossover with decent AWD and only costs around 30k, in the market when a Tiguan is 40! sure it is more plasticky but it works and is a genuinely good workhorse.

there's also a new swift sport hybrid coming out which i hope will be an improvement on the hybrid version of the previous swift which actually LOST power compared to the ICE one

wistec1

336 posts

44 months

Yet another tragic victim of the EV onslaught. I pity the ICE.

Maccmike8

1,067 posts

57 months

Such a shame.

Foss62

1,090 posts

68 months

The transition from ICE to EV is probably inevitable in all manufacturers ranges, but I don’t really understand the seemingly concurrent loss of functional types, style and practicality?
Estates, ‘drivers’ saloons, practical off-roaders, small sporty hatchbacks etc. all seem to be rapidly disappearing in favour of bulbous, garish constructions often with huge external dimensions and with little to identify them as to brand.
Is this something to do with technical requirements of EV drivetrains or have manufacturers just fallen into some sort of group delusion as to what customers might want?

Silvanus

5,572 posts

26 months

Suzuki drops the Ignis, just as Hyundai, Dacia and Fiat launch EV rivals.

Wheel Turned Out

667 posts

41 months

The phrase "don't know what you've got 'til it's gone" comes to mind.

GreatScott2016

1,271 posts

91 months

That is such a shame and while I’ve never been a Suzuki customer, I’ve often been tempted by the little Jimny.

OPC100

208 posts

191 months

I did wonder what Suzuki would do re. the is it 15% of sales that need to be EV this year, otherwise they face a £15k fine for each one over the 85% limit? Will they buy someone else's allowance? This seems so stupid to me when you basically penalise Suzuki that are generally producing low co2 simple / mild hybrid swifts and ignis at £20k, in the same way as JLR with high co2 £100k+ suv's. banghead

They have made some great cheap fun cars. The normally aspirated swift sports for country b roads and 4x4 jimnys for off roading being the highlights for me. Here's hoping that they will continue with the same philosophy in the future ev world.

OPC100

208 posts

191 months

Actually just reading about the ZEV mandate and it is 22% ev this year. Some manufacturers are going to have to do some serious 'juggling the books' this year to make that work.

mooseracer

1,968 posts

173 months

cannedrex2406 said:
Not the Jimny frown

there's also a new swift sport hybrid coming out which i hope will be an improvement on the hybrid version of the previous swift which actually LOST power compared to the ICE one
No more Swift Sport according to this article

MajorMantra

1,357 posts

115 months

Grumble. The incentives are clearly wrong when the small economical cars are all being pushed out by much larger crossovers.

dunnoreally

1,014 posts

111 months

That's another hot-ish supermini out of the picture. Is it only the Abarth 500 and the Polo gti left now?

Silvanus

5,572 posts

26 months

MajorMantra said:
Grumble. The incentives are clearly wrong when the small economical cars are all being pushed out by much larger crossovers.
Other manufacturers are bringing out EV city cars, I'm surprised Suzuki aren't, it would be exactly where I'd expect Suzuki to have gone. I wonder how long they have left when their best selling car is the aging Vitara. Could they go the way of of Mitsubishi and Daihatsu?

Nickp82

3,250 posts

96 months

Sad to read this. I worked in a Suzuki dealer for a number of years and have a real soft spot for the Swift Sport. Not a fan of 4x4 cars personally but good used examples of the Jimny used to be great sellers so I still like it for that reason.
Suzuki were a great franchise to work with so I hope their EV is a success.

gravitygravy

99 posts

39 months

Well that's the residuals on my Jimny guaranteed for another 5 years!

Bizarre that they're binning the Ignis, they're great little cars.

el romeral

1,086 posts

140 months

Shame that, the demise of some characterful little chaps. Wonder what they will all be replaced by - will they even be comparable?

Silvanus

5,572 posts

26 months

No direct replacement for the Ignis, new EV crossover similar in size to a Hyundai Kona or Jeep Avenger will be there next new car.

Brett748

934 posts

169 months

This EV thing is a total red herring. How can replacing small, 1000kg cars with 2 tonne+ EVs with the associated embodied energy sustainable?!

The world has gone mad.