7 Vehicles We’re Going to Miss in 2025

Mitsubishi/John Murphy Photography

Another year is upon us, and that means we have to say goodbye to a batch of cars that, for good reasons or bad, will no longer grace us with their presence. Some of these losses are worth lamenting for their performance or what they’ve come to mean to enthusiasts over decades, others simply for what their absence will mean for the new car market in 2025.

Most of us on the Hagerty Media team will miss at least one vehicle that’s going out of production in 2024. One of us is going to miss none of them. Which car among the below will you miss most, or do you agree with our sole contrarian?

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Chevrolet Camaro

2024 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 Collector’s Edition
GM

I’m going to miss the Camaro. My brother owned a 1967 Camaro RS when I was about four years old, so I go way back with this model. I was also in Detroit when Bob Lutz introduced the fifth-gen concept. I loved the look of those cars, but it was the performance of the sixth-gen that I’ll really miss.

When Chevy launched it in late 2015 as part of its “Find New Roads” campaign, I got to drive a 2016 Camaro SS across Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and Southern California. I’ve driven turbo four-cylinder, V-6, SS, and ZL1 versions on track and the Alpha chassis is just so good no matter the variant. I think that an early sixth-gen SS 1LE is probably my favorite late-model, but there are so many great variants from every generation that I hold out hope that the Camaro can somehow make another comeback. —Brandan Gillogly

Mitsubishi Mirage (yep!)

2024 Mirage G4 White Diamond Exterior 1
Mitsubishi

I’m going to miss the Mitsubishi Mirage. Not that I’ve ever driven one, or been in one, or even seen one in the last, I don’t know, year or so. But like bald eagles and tardigrades and guys who play drums on buckets, I just like knowing they’re out there. With so much focus in the last several years on both HORSEPOWER WARS! and, more recently, EVs nobody wants, ultra-affordable basic-ass transportation has been completely brushed aside. Call me a “poor,” but I can’t imagine paying $100,000 for a pickup truck, no matter what’s powering it or how many tailgates it has. But I absolutely can imagine paying $15,000 for a year-end clearance stripper with a five-speed, an AM radio, and manual everything. I’m not alone, either. —Stefan Lombard

2014 Mitsubishi Mirage ES our two cents wrong about cars
Mitsubishi

I’ll miss the Alfa Romeo Giulia Quadrifoglio, a car I loved but dismissed because the first three I drove all had some sort of electrical glitch. But that’s not my answer. Neither is the Nissan Titan, a stalwart, unappreciated, often underpriced full-size pickup. It isn’t even the lovely Jaguar F-Type, or the Ram 1500 TRX, at whose press event occurred the only instance in which a manufacturer actually encouraged me to jump the vehicle. No, my most-missed will be the Mitsubishi Mirage.

In 2014, it was the worst new car I had driven since the Yugo and the Smart, but it has since improved and tales of the Mirage’s near-bulletproof reliability abound. At $17,840, including shipping, it’s the cheapest new car you can buy, and it has a very good warranty and roadside assistance. I have an affinity for cheap new cars, dating back to a $6000 Toyota Tercel, equipped with air and a four-speed manual transmission, that served us so well during the first years of marriage. With the departure of the Mirage, and next year the Nissan Versa, the lengthy era of super-affordable new cars ends. I don’t see it returning unless we’re successfully invaded by the Chinese. And that makes me sad. —Steven Cole Smith

Jaguar F-Type

Matt Tierney

Jaguar’s the talk of the town these days—or, wait, that was last week. As the newly branded company chases novelty, I’m getting nostalgic for the F-Type, modern Jaguar’s own exercise in nostalgia. Built from 2014 to 2024, the F-Type was a beautiful coupe (or convertible) that harkened back to the E-Type. Oh, and the F-Type was available with a supercharged, 575-hp V-8. I drove a droptop version with that engine in 2022 and would jump at the chance to drive one again: It’s expensive and stiffly sprung, with an infotainment system that’s already dated, but it hits me in the feels. It can out-bark a Hellcat and it’s prettier than any Corvette since the chrome-bumper C3. That’s my type of muscle car. —Grace Houghton

Ram 1500 Classic

2024 ram tradesman 1500 classic configurator
This is a screenshot off the configurator, because even Ram doesn’t have a nice photo of the 1500 Classic!Stellantis/Ram

That the Ram 1500 Classic is going away should surprise no one—after all, it had been around in the same basic form since 2009. I don’t have a particular affinity for it or any great memories from my time behind the wheel of one, but its departure means one less simple, basic truck offering on the market, and that’s something to lament. Besides the Camaro, there’s not much else leaving the market that I’ll miss. —Eddy Eckart

I’d like to second the Ram Classic. As someone who’s hoping to make the leap to a truck in the near future, I always saw the Ram Classic as sort of a last bastion of affordable full-size pickups. Whether or not the math would bear that out, I’m not sure. But it was more psychological for me.

Still, times change and product lineups do, too. The new Ram is very impressive (particularly in the RHO guise) and the other full-size offerings are plenty compelling as well. —Nathan Petroelje

Chevrolet Malibu

2018 Chevrolet Malibu
2018 Chevrolet MalibuChevrolet/Jessica Lynn Walker

Like the Mirage, the current ninth-gen (2016–24) Chevy Malibu isn’t anything to write home about. Its departure after this year wouldn’t be that noteworthy, either, but for the fact that it’s the last sedan built by GM’s biggest brand. The four-door sedan used to be the default body style on American roads. Times have changed, and now there are only a handful of domestic options left. For 2025 Cadillac will be the only GM division with sedans in the lineup. —Andrew Newton

Lamborghini Huracán

Lamborghini Huracán Tecnica spoiler diffuser rear
Lamborghini

The Huracán marks the end of the V-10 road car era, one that began with the Dodge Ram and Viper, took a detour to BMW and Audi, but was never represented better than by Lamborghini. Even though my last drive in one (a Technica) was brief, it was wild. On the narrow roads of Emilia-Romagna, it was easier to place and therefore travel faster than bigger brother Aventador. And my ears are still ringing from the noise! —Nik Berg

Nissan GT-R

2024 Nissan GT-R Skyline Edition exterior front three quarter Bayside Blue
Nissan

The passing of loved ones sometimes marks eras in a person’s life. The end of the Nissan GT-R—in its current form, anyway—may force me into a mid-life crisis. The R35 generation hit the street in 2008, when I was still in high school and since then I’ve heard, read, and watched plenty of tales about how fast and impressive the car was. Its appearance barely changed, allowing me to feel like I was in high school again for a moment whenever I saw one. Now the number of “in the wild” sightings of R35s is sure to drop, and with it my ability to mentally play pretend and be a senior in high school, bench racing in the auto shop while doing a clutch replacement on a Toyota pickup. Farewell, GT-R. You never changed much, and I loved you for it. —Kyle Smith

And Sajeev’s pick …

Murilee Martin

Oh heck no, I call BS on this question. There is nothing I will miss in 2025, and not just because the Mirage stopped being offered with a five-speed manual. I will only weep for what happened in 2012, when Ford finally ran out of time to squeeze the last bit of profit out of the Ford Ranger, and the trifecta of the Crown Victoria, Grand Marquis, and Town Car.

This quartet of body-on-frame vehicles likely died for several reasons, but the biggest one in my mind is Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard 226. We may never know the full stories of why we are losing each of the above-mentioned vehicles in 2025, but one thing is for sure: Do you even care after what was TAKEN FROM US in 2012? —Sajeev Mehta

Read next Up next: Formula 1’s Abu Dhabi Grand Prix: This Was the View from Seat 20 B

Comments

    Old cars? How about the Lincoln Town Car! I own two. A 2002 Cartier and the 2009 Executive Series. Both are almost mint!!!! Was offered $70,000. for the 02 by Barrett-Jackson Auctioneers but declined their offer. Why, because it is as I said, in almost, 99% mint. Lincoln truly made an error in not continuing the vehicle!! The Rolls Royce style grill would really enhance the car instead what is on mine today. The Lincoln was and still is the flagship of American vehicles. My 2009 is also in almost pristine condition as well. Today’s cars look all the same; perhaps more European in style. To many bells and whistles!!! I will keep both of them. Finally, they are low mileage; 99K for the 02 and 130K for the 09!! Lincoln, bring back the old style and I will be they WILL sell for sure.

    For me, at 68 years old, it’s the Malibu. My days of fast cars and bikes are behind me. I owned plenty in my time. I have been driving a 2010 Malibu for the past four years, it is dependable and decent on fuel. I have had to replace one belt tensioner and serpentine belt on the 2.4 in over 40,000 kilometers. Living in northern Ontario Canada, I know rust well eventually be a factor, even though it is undercoated yearly. My only issue with the last gen Malibu is the 1.6 L engine which is shared with the Cruze, not a fan. I haven’t retired yet , and hope not to for a few more years yet. My summer toy is a 94 F150 short box that has never seen winter, so is close to perfect rust wise. We have a 2016 Kia Sorento that is also holding up well so if all goes according to Hoyle, we will not be buying another vehicle any time soon.

    northern Ontario, i feel your pain! I am in the Sault area, and just got my 07 ram body repaired for the rust that was happening. Always undercoated, but some shops take shortcuts. Bottoms of the front fenders, and rear fenders, not deep enough in the rockers, not enough over rear wheel arches…..

    I have to agree with you, Sajeev, the Crown Vic, Gran Marquis and Town Car are great cars and I recommend them to anybody looking for a safe and reliable used car although getting hard to find one with low mileage. I never owned one until recently because I prefer a 2 door as in my Mark VIII and I have my F150 and a 09 Explorer for my realtor daughter. But with 309000 miles on the Explorer I wanted her to get in something with lower mileage and found a 09 Gran Marquis Premier Edition with 110000 miles. Plenty of interior room and a huge trunk. Engine is easy to service too. I found it disappointing apparently as Ford’s plan to phase these cars out they didn’t update some of the options my Explorer has like the Sync audio system. However, it is still a pleasure to drive and she is averaging over 20mpg.
    Regarding the Ram. All manufacturers need to offer a basic pick up without unneeded options for a work truck. But they won’t because there isn’t enough profit in just a basic no frills pick up.

    I’m with Sajeev here. I owned a limousine company and the Town Cars grew on me. The comfort and durability of those things is unmatched. I had several with many hundreds of thousands of miles on them and my clients still loved them. Not only that but I had learned to fix almost any possible problem they could have and parts were cheap.

    As a four time Grand Marquis owner (and my current daily driver) I too continue to miss the Panther platform cars.

    Affordable basic cars. The real reasons behind them all disappearing one-by-one are disturbing – and would be much more disturbing if we actually knew (!!??) A practical part of me cries a bit about this inside. But hopefully in the next few years, things switch around a bit and America begins to Make Cars Great Again (or even just Make Cars At-all Again). Pray for an automotive miracle!

    I love my 68 Plymouth Valiant Signet. 225 slant 6 Auto. Great cheap ride. Car is loaded with Carpet, shaded windshield and wheel lip moldings. Huge 13″ WW tires. I love to sing is good as this old girl has no place in the dash for a radio. I drive it around town mostly. Gets over 25 mpg. Needs a little interior work but I do’t care.

    I’ve owned several Mopar A-bodies, including my first car, a 1969 Barracuda convertible I still own. I cut my teeth in auto repair on those cars. Never could kill them either. And simple-some of them lacked even power steering.
    However…I’m apparently in the minority here. Maybe I’m just getting old but I like today’s cars, sometimes even the SUV/CUVs. Compared to the cars I grew up with, today’s cars are generally faster, safer, more comfortable and more durable. My 2012 Challenger was so enjoyable that I retired it early (only 210K miles) just so I could buy another before they ended production. And so far, my 2022 has been more trouble-free, plus I love some of the features the old one lacked (backup camera especially). Yes, the old cars had character, but so did my uncle who always farted during dinner. Character can be a mixed bag.

    I will miss the Ram 1500 Classic. Regular cab, short bed with a 390hp Hemi and 3.92 gears. A disguised hot rod! I had to special order my 2021 because most dealers didn’t have any and wouldn’t order one for me. I’ve been purchasing them since they first came out. Although the new Ram is a better truck, not everyone wants or needs a behemoth.

    I could do without all of the electronic crap (toys) in the vehicles. Sadly, for most “drivers” (actually bad drivers) having these toys is more important than driving. We recently had to give up our daily driver (2006 escape with 270k miles) due to RUST, computer problems, needed tires suspension etc. Got a “new” Bronco Sport demo @ decent year end cost. It’s not bad – we have minimal toys on it. But we are still keeping my wife’s 2005 escape (less rust, lower miles) and # 2 driver.
    NEVER getting rid of the 71F250, 79 vette, 72Karman Ghia or 37 Nash Lafayette. or my 79 GS550.

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