Key Takeaways:
- Volkswagen will cut its model lineup by up to 50 percent
- Annual production capacity will shrink to 9 million vehicles
- Up to 100,000 jobs may be at risk across the group
Key Takeaways:

Volkswagen's plan to cut its model lineup in half marks one of the most aggressive restructurings in automotive history.
Volkswagen plans to cut its model lineup by as much as 50 percent and reduce annual production capacity to 9 million vehicles, the German automaker said Thursday after a high-stakes supervisory board meeting.
"The global situation has continued to deteriorate over the past twelve months," Chief Executive Oliver Blume said in a recorded message following the meeting. "Geopolitical tensions, high costs including those caused by tariffs, increasing regulation and ever more intense global competition are increasing the pressure on the entire automotive industry."
The company will also slash available options for surviving models by up to 75 percent, prioritizing only the most profitable segments. The group has already cut 2 million units of capacity — 1 million in China and 1 million in Europe — since the pandemic and now targets a further 1 million reduction. Overhead costs fell by 1 billion euros in the first quarter of 2026 under a previously agreed cost-saving deal that committed to 35,000 job cuts in Germany by the end of the decade.
The restructuring puts at risk as many as 100,000 jobs across Volkswagen's global workforce of roughly 657,000, according to IG Metall, Germany's largest industrial union. The company has already announced 50,000 job cuts, with an additional 15,000 reductions planned across Audi, Porsche, and the Cariad software unit. Volkswagen declined to comment on reports that it may close four plants — Zwickau, Emden, Hanover, and Neckarsulm — or that it may sell Ducati and take Lamborghini public.
The Scale of the Downsizing
Volkswagen's pre-pandemic production capacity stood at roughly 12 million vehicles. The company has already eliminated 2 million units of that capacity and now plans to remove another million, bringing the total to 9 million — roughly in line with the 9 million vehicles it sold last year. The last time Volkswagen operated at this capacity level was in 2016, when it delivered 10.3 million vehicles before the diesel-emissions scandal triggered a multiyear restructuring.
The model portfolio reduction is equally dramatic. Volkswagen Group's 10 brands — spanning Volkswagen, Audi, SEAT, Cupra, Skoda, Porsche, Bentley, and Lamborghini — currently offer more than 100 distinct nameplates globally. Cutting that by half would eliminate dozens of models, including the Touareg and Touran, which have already been discontinued, and the T-Roc Convertible, which is set to end production in 2027.
Union Pushback and Political Fallout
Nationwide protests by shop stewards and works council members erupted across Volkswagen Group facilities Thursday, triggered by reports of the board's plans. Daniela Cavallo, head of Volkswagen's works council, said Blume must address the workforce Friday and respond to the rumors.
"If the CEO fails to comply, extraordinary works meetings will be held simultaneously across VW after the summer break to summon the management board members to the microphone," Cavallo said in a statement.
The last time Volkswagen faced this level of labor confrontation was in 2021, when the company pushed through 30,000 job cuts in Germany through early retirement and buyout programs rather than compulsory layoffs. This time, the stakes are higher: IG Metall has warned that compulsory redundancies at German plants — which have been off-limits since 1994 under a labor agreement — could now be on the table.
What's at Stake for the European Auto Industry
Volkswagen's restructuring carries implications well beyond the company itself. The automaker accounts for roughly 20 percent of European vehicle production and supports a supply chain employing hundreds of thousands across Germany, Eastern Europe, and beyond. A reduction of 100,000 jobs at Volkswagen would ripple through suppliers such as Continental, ZF Friedrichshafen, and Bosch, which have already announced their own cost-cutting programs.
The company's decision to halve its model lineup also signals a strategic retreat from the broad-market approach that made Volkswagen the world's largest automaker by sales in 2016 and 2017. Instead, Volkswagen will concentrate on the most profitable segments — likely SUVs, premium electric vehicles under the Porsche and Audi brands, and high-margin models in China, where it faces intensifying competition from local rivals such as BYD and NIO.
Blume's forward scenario is clear: if Volkswagen can execute the restructuring without triggering a prolonged labor conflict, the company could emerge leaner and more profitable. If union resistance forces concessions, the cost savings may fall short of what is needed to fund the 180 billion euro transition to electric vehicles that Volkswagen has committed to through 2028.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.