Currently reading: Citroën to end production of Grand C4 Spacetourer
One of the last remaining traditional MPVs left on sale will bow out in July

Production of the Citroën Grand C4 Spacetourer will end in July, with Citroën citing changing customer buying habits and a greater focus on its SUV range.

The seven-seat MPV, which first rolled out of the factory in 2014, has already been indirectly replaced by the ë-Berlingo and ë-Spacetourer van-based electric MPVs.

The combustion-fuelled versions of these models were taken off sale earlier this year. 

UK sales of the Grand C4 Spacetourer ended earlier this month, but Citroën says it has 439 orders still left to deliver before the end of production at its factory in Vigo, Spain. This, the firm adds, demonstrates the car's enduring popularity.

Citroën sold 1026 examples of the Grand C4 Spacetourer in 2021, with an additional 490 before it was pulled off sale. In comparison, just 18 ë-Spacetourers have been sold since its launch in October 2020 and 117 ë-Berlingos since it arrived early last year.

The Grand C4 Spacetourer was sold as the C4 Picasso until 2018 and was also available in five-seat form until 2019, when that smaller car was pulled from sale. 

It was introduced as a replacement for the C8 MPV, which had been on sale in two generations since 1994 alongside near-identical sibling models from Fiat, Lancia and Peugeot.

Now the French car maker says it wants to focus on pushing and developing its SUV range, especially its popular C5 Aircross, which was updated earlier this year.

“The Grand C4 Spacetourer offered customers an attractive and modern design and has earned a reputation for its unrivalled comfort, internal versatility and space, as well as its exemplary modularity and light cabin, thanks to the long windscreen and panoramic glass roof," Citroën said in its farewell.

"Its popularity is demonstrated by the number of orders due to be fulfilled before the end of production in July.”

Earlier this month, Citroën unveiled a new entry-level variant of the Citroën C3 supermini to plug the gap left by the Citroën C1 city car, which was removed from the production in January after 17 years on sale

The new model, named the C3 You, is priced from £12,995, making it the new entry point into the Citroën range.

Will Rimell

Will Rimell
Title: Deputy news editor

Will is a journalist with more than eight years experience in roles that range from news reporter to editor. He joined Autocar in 2022 as deputy news editor, moving from a local news background.

In his current role as deputy news editor, Will’s focus is with Autocar and Autocar Business; he also manages Haymarket's aftermarket publication CAT.

Writing is, of course, a big part of his role too. Stories come in many forms, from interviewing top executives, reporting from car launches, and unearthing exclusives.

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MoJoker 21 April 2022
Never heard or seen any information about the ë-Spacetourers. If they don't advertise it, how do they expect people to be interested in it?
Jeremy 21 April 2022

@ tuga. As a former C4 Grand Picasso owner I agree. Peugeot have however been clever in selling essentially the same vehicle very well as an SUV - the 5008. 

tuga 21 April 2022
And it's a shame. It still looks good, and MPVs are the much more practical and well packaged than SUVs/ CUVs. Also, I love the Berlingo, but it's basically a van with seats. A nice van, but still.

No 3 doors, no coupes, no MPVs. The masses have spoken. Thanks everybody :/

Tristan Hunt-Walker 21 April 2022

The death of the three door car is particularly sad. 

catnip 21 April 2022
tuga wrote:

And it's a shame. It still looks good, and MPVs are the much more practical and well packaged than SUVs/ CUVs. Also, I love the Berlingo, but it's basically a van with seats. A nice van, but still. No 3 doors, no coupes, no MPVs. The masses have spoken. Thanks everybody :/

The masses, skilfully guided by the motor manufacturers and motoring journalists ....

streaky 22 April 2022
tuga wrote:

Also, I love the Berlingo, but it's basically a van with seats. A nice van, but still.

I've travelled and driven many miles in a friend's Berlingo and it is far better riding and more refined than many cars.  I think it's more a car-based van than a van-based car.  If you wanted comfort, bags of space, fantastic visibility and, in this particular case, very good reliability you didn't have to look any further, except now all you can get new is an electric version with a useless range.