Volkswagen cuts costs: MEB+ and ID.Roc platforms at risk
The Group plans to invest €20 billion less. This will be at the expense of advanced architecture and the compact electric SUV.
These are not easy times for Volkswagen. Faced with the need to cut costs, the company is planning to reduce investment by around €20 billion. Over the next five years, the idea is to reduce it from €180 billion to €160 billion.
This is according to the German magazine Manager Magazin, which has also drawn up a list of areas that will receive fewer resources and will therefore be working with the handbrake pulled.
MEB+ is one of the illustrious victims
In anticipation of the group's new generation of electric vehicles, those that will emerge from the Trinity project and the SSP platform, Volkswagen has planned to evolve the current MEB platform and take it to a more technologically advanced stage, called MEB+.
The MEB platform+ was announced to arrive in 2026, bringing a number of improvements in terms of efficiency, performance and load speed. However, given the cuts envisaged by senior management, the MEB+ might not arrive or might arrive late. In the first case, we would go straight from the MEB to the SSP, which is expected in 2028; in the second case, however, the SSP would also be delayed (it was originally scheduled to arrive in 2025).
The MEB platform will be used by all brands
Longer range and ultra-fast charging
Models at risk
Volkswagen is currently considering closing a number of German plants and laying off a considerable number of employees. While there was previously talk of 15,000 redundancies, there are now numerous reports of a double figure of 30,000. The company is not confirming these figures, and is content to explain that it "needs to reduce costs at its German sites".
But cost-cutting also involves consolidating the range. The compact electric SUV that is due to be produced at the historic Wolfsburg plant is likely to be one of the casualties of this cost-cutting exercise. This model, called the ID.Roc, since the name has been registered, was first mooted in the spring. It would be a kind of ID.4 on a smaller scale, with the difference that it would not adopt the styling of the ID family, but that of the company's combustion-powered models, as shown by the ID.2 All.
Gallery: Volkswagen ID.2all
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
This Volkswagen Supercar Isn't Real, But It Should Be
‘Just Might Be Saving Your Life’: Man Bedazzles His Car With Stars From The Dollar General. Then He Deploys The Airbags
Volkswagen Explains Why The New Atlas Looks Different Than China's Teramont
Baby Mercedes G-Class Might Not Be Made In Germany After All
The Stick Shift Isn't Dead Yet: Every Manual Car You Can Still Buy In 2026
Onboard With The BMW M2 As It Breaks Its Own Nurburgring Record
Volkswagen Group Speaks Out On Reports It Could Sell Some Brands