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Volkswagen is turning the Jetta into a $15,000 electric SUV, but not for the US roads

Boxy, budget-friendly, and built for Beijing: the Jetta X is Volkswagen's most unconventional EV play yet.

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Volkswagen Jetta front profile.
Volkswagen / Jetta

If you grew up watching a Volkswagen Jetta sit sensibly in suburban areas, brace yourself. The Jetta is now a boxy electric SUV concept for the Chinese market, with a cutthroat budget EV market. Unfortunately, it has no plans to visit the United States (via CarNewsChina). 

What does the Jetta X Concept’s arrival mean for the company?

Volkswagen unveiled the Jetta X concept via a media event on April 21, 2026, ahead of the Beijing Auto Show. It marks the brand’s foray into China’s new energy vehicle market, and the brand took its sweet time to enter it, in my opinion. 

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In China, Jetta isn’t just a model name. It operates as a separate entry-level brand as part of the FAW-Volkswagen collaboration, which has been selling affordable combustion engines for about six to seven years now. 

Two words: rugged and square. It has been deliberately stripped of Volkswagen badges as well. The concept comes with a boxy silhouette, pronounced fenders, and trapezoidal wheel arches with blacked-out cladding. 

What does the Jetta X actually look like?

Then there are narrow LED light signatures, along with a minimalist interior dominated by large screens, and a few physical controls to round things up. What’s odd, however, is that the technical specifications about the car, including the battery size, range, and powertrain, were not disclosed. 

The Jetta X Concept is for budget-conscious Chinese buyers, and nobody else. The model targets the 100,000 yuan price band, which is about $14,700. Further, Jetta plans to launch as many as five models by 2028, four of which are confirmed to be new energy vehicles. 

The timing is deliberate, as the automaker has been losing its market share in China for nine consecutive months (22.1% year-over-year drop in March 2026). Meanwhile, in the United States, Volkswagen is ending the production of the electric ID.4 to refocus on petrol-powered models. 

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