The Slow Death Of The Three-Door Hatchback Is Happening, And We're Not Happy

It’s the little things that make the difference in car ownership. Sure, you might own a 10-second Subaru Impreza, but it’s the work you carried out on it yourself that makes it special to you. Little mods, photos you’re particularly proud of or even just small design cues that really appeal to you on some level are all potential building blocks for the bond between you and your car.
That’s why we’re a bit sad to learn that the three-door hatchback is on the endangered species list. A three-door car was always the one that we wanted when we were first setting out into the awesome world of driving. A three-door version of an otherwise ordinary (and therefore affordable) model was the sportier, more purposeful-looking version. It was the flawed but more interesting version that said you wanted style before practicality. It was cooler.

It was the choice that said: I’m young, I’ve made an illogical decision based on image because I wanted to, and I don’t care what you think. Mates that wanted a ride just had to deal with climbing past the front seats. Plus, we always secretly liked to think that the minor weight saving in three-door cars was basically worth an extra 10bhp…
Sales figures are showing a massive swing away from these less practical machines, though, even among the smallest classes, where paying extra for rear doors used to be seen as a pointless waste of cash. Unless we’re much mistaken, as recently as six or seven years ago the sales mix was still in favour of fewer doors among superminis like the Fiesta.

You still can pick up new three-door cars, of course, particularly among small cars, but the larger stuff; the kind of thing you might look at as a second or third car after passing your test, is dying out. Audi says that the next A3 is ‘likely’ to drop the three-door model, while Ford, Honda and Opel/Vauxhall have already done so with the Focus, Civic and Astra. Going down a class, the Seat Ibiza and Renault Clio both come with five doors only, and that number could easily rise in the coming years.
Kia has more-or-less announced that the next Pro_cee’d will be a longer, five-door shooting brake design. We won’t complain if the finished product looks anything like the deeply pretty concept we looked at yesterday, but we do quite like the current Pro_Cee’d GT and we prefer it to the five-door Cee’d GT. We’d prefer to own the three-door.

We can’t fight commercial realities. If every car enthusiast in the world went and bought a brand new three-door hatchback every two years then things would be different, but as a rule of thumb that’s not how we work. The world simply doesn’t buy enough new ones any more, and ultimately, as they get dropped the second-hand market will eventually dry up. It’s not the end of the world, but it’s one more piece chipped out of that shrinking sphere of little things we love about cars.













Comments
Nooooooooooooooo
Buy an a5
If a three-door Fiesta gets me a kiss from a girl like the one in the pic, yes, I’m sad too, very sad, oh so sad, incredibly sad, I’m so sad that I’m at a loss for words.
Honestly, I like that the trend is going towards 5 door hatchbacks. I liked 3 doors all the time until I’ve sat in the back of one. The back of a 3 door Audi A3 has less room than that of a 5 door Fiesta.
I can understand why people want 5-door versions of cars like the Golf and Focus. But now we seem to have 5-door versions of the Up. Those just look ugly and silly.
I’m trying to find a nice three door 1 series atm. The death of three door hatchbacks is fast, not slow.
4 door mini anyone?
Well tgere’s always the clio. So long as the cup exists I think there will always be an awesome 3 door on the market for people who care. Personally I’m probably adding to the problem because with kids and elderly parents 3 doors are just a massive faf.
To be honest, I’m not sad at all about this. If you want to waste so much practicality just because it looks a tiny bit better, then that’s your own fault. I also can’t see why suddenly a car enthusiasts has to buy a three-door hatchback. Is it because a car must be objectively worse to be loveable or what?
Does nobody in the general public care for torsional body stiffness anymore!?
Pagination