Opel Crossland


The Opel Crossland is a subcompact crossover SUV marketed by Opel from 2017 to 2024. It was also marketed as the Vauxhall Crossland in the United Kingdom, officially unveiled to the media in January 2017. The car was officially shown at the Geneva Motor Show in March 2017, and was originally known as the Opel and Vauxhall Crossland X. It went on sale in the summer of 2017. At the same time, the Opel Meriva was discontinued, as demand for crossovers and SUVs in the B-segment is continually growing at the expense of compact MPVs.
The Crossland was succeeded by the Frontera in 2024.

Overview

The Crossland was built at the Opel factory in Zaragoza, Spain. It is based on a modified version of Groupe PSA's PF1 platform, which is used by the Citroën C3 Picasso and the Peugeot 2008, shared with the Citroën C3 Aircross. The Crossland X received a facelift in 2020 and was renamed to “Opel Crossland”, dropping the "X".

Pre-facelift

Facelift

Powertrains

The Crossland is available with petrol, diesel and LPG engines. The petrol engines are all 1.2-litre three cylinder units, with power outputs of 82, 110 and. The two higher powered versions are turbocharged, and have balance shafts. On the diesel side, the Crossland offers a 1.6-litre four-cylinder engine with either or. This engine was quickly replaced by a marginally smaller, 1.5-litre version in May 2018, reflecting updates to the Crossland's French-branded sister models.
Both the diesel and petrol models get a six- speed manual gearbox; the other engines come with five-speed manuals. A six-speed automatic is available, in conjunction with the engine. The LPG model is based on the entry level naturally aspirated petrol engine. When operating on LPG, it has a maximum power output of.

Sales

In March 2018, Opel announced that over 100,000 orders for the Crossland or Crossland X had already been taken.
YearEuropeTurkey
201738,964
201895,180
2019114,721
202091,411
202180,0725,437
202210,433
202313,090
20248,270