Volvo Sedan And Wagon Could Make Their Grand Return To The U.S. As A Counter To SUV Culture - Jalopnik
Volvo’s potential return to the U.S. sedan and wagon market is being studied as a counter to SUV dominance, with an electric midsize lineup under consideration for 2028. According to Jalopnik, Volvo had planned an all-electric, all-crossover range in the United States, but is now evaluating bringing an electric sedan and a station wagon to showrooms in 2028. Because the vehicles are already in development for Europe, adjustments for U.S. readiness are expected to be limited. The models would use the automaker’s 800-volt SPA3 architecture introduced under the EX60 crossover and likely carry 60- or 70-series badging. Production would be in Europe, and a rugged Cross Country wagon variant is possible. Jalopnik projects starting prices in the low $50,000s and roughly 10,000 annual U.S. sales. The plan follows Volvo ending its last remaining U.S. sedan, the S90, in 2025, and discontinuing the V60 and V90 Cross Country in spring, shifting focus to crossovers and SUVs.





