Honda Civic Coupe, Including Si, Discontinued This Year
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Honda Civic Coupe, including Si, discontinued this year
Honda's making some big changes to its 2021 lineup, and unfortunately, two cars will reach the end of the road. The Honda Civic Coupe and the Fit will both exit production this year.
The Japanese automaker said Friday Civic Coupe and Fit production will end with the 2020 model year. Both represented slow sellers in the lineup, especially as more buyers went home with the Civic Hatchback, rather than the two-door model. Honda underscored it's still very much focused on the Civic lineup, but the sedan will remain its baseline, while the hatchback provides the sportier choice.
Sales of the Civic Hatchback have increased to 24% of the model's sales mix since it arrived in 2016. Meanwhile, the Coupe dropped from 16% to just 6%. A shame because the coupe is the best looking of the Civic bunch.
Unfortunately, this also means the Si Coupe is a goner, too. Honda confirmed with Roadshow the end of the coupe body style also means the two-door Si will not return. Honda Civic Si production will take a pause in general this year as Honda inches closer to revealing the next-generation Civic next spring. The Si will return, but it will only sport four doors.
The 2021 Civic sedan and hatchback variants will be carryover from 2020.
As for the Fit, its demise was all but confirmed. Honda already revealed a new Fit for Europe and Japan but consistently kept quiet about its prospects in the US. With the Fit dead in the US, the HR-V and Civic will serve as the automaker's entry-level models. In fact, Honda said the Civic Hatchback outsells the Fit 2-1. It's not all bad, though because the automaker said it plans to channel investments out of the Fit and into the HR-V and Civic to make them even better.
The brand also shared some Accord news, and it's a mixed bag. On one hand, we'll see a refreshed model debut very soon and it will go on sale later this year. On the other, Honda said it discontinued the Accord's manual transmission.
The HR-V and Odyssey will also undergo a refresh and show up in the near future.
First published July 17, 9:08 a.m. PT.
Update, 9:42 a.m.: Honda has corrected its earlier statement saying there will be a next-gen Civic Si Coupe. The Civic Coupe and Si Coupe will not return at all after this year. These changes reflect in the fourth paragraph.
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Honestly, we're a little surprised this didn't happen sooner. Manual transmissions are less and less popular with new car buyers these days, especially in mainstream models like the Honda Accord. To that end, the Accord officially loses its stick-shift option, according to a document Honda sent Roadshow on Friday.
Honda says it stopped building manual transmission-equipped Accords last December; the models accounted for less than 2% of overall sales. The six-speed manual was available as a no-cost option on the Accord Sport, and you could get it with either the 192-horsepower, 1.5-liter turbo I4 or the more powerful, 252-hp, 2.0-liter turbo I4.
The Honda Accord was the last midsize sedan to offer a manual transmission in the US, with competitors like the Mazda6 and Toyota Camry discontinuing them years ago. We always enjoyed when a manual Sport would roll through our test fleet -- it gave the otherwise well-rounded Accord a little extra somethin'-somethin'.
It's unclear what other changes are in store for the 2021 Honda Accord. An updated version will debut later this year. We can expect a few styling tweaks and technology updates, both of which will help the Accord stay fiercely competitive. We'll just shed a brief tear for the manual transmission while we can.
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