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Mini’s unique six-door hatchback will reach the end of the road next year, amid declining sales and a move to electric cars and SUVs.


Mini Australia has confirmed reports production of the Clubman – a small six-door hatchback larger than the traditional Mini hatch, with a ‘barn-door’ split-opening tailgate – is due to end in February 2024.

The current-generation model was unveiled nine years ago, in 2015 – while the Clubman name stretches back to 2007 in its modern BMW-owned form, or 1969 as a version of the original Mini shape.



“Mini will not offer the Mini Clubman Final Edition for the Australian and New Zealand markets,” James Orlov, Mini Australia head of product and planning for Australia and New Zealand, said in a media statement to Drive.



“However, we will continue to offer the Clubman Cooper S and JCW variants until the model’s official end of production in February 2024.

There will not be another generation of the Clubman wagon, which has been a relatively niche seller for Mini in Australia and overseas.



Its axing will make way for a new range of electric vehicles – including a new city-sized electric SUV known as the Aceman, along with the next Countryman SUV, which is due to undergo a growth spurt to appeal to US buyers requiring more space.

Three- and five-door versions of the standard Mini hatchback are slated for heavy facelifts next year – though only the three-door will gain an all-new electric variant, underpinned by an architecture developed with China’s Great Wall Motors, and built in China.

The current Clubman measures 4.27 metres long – smaller than the 4.3 or 4.4-metre length expected for the new Countryman – and is priced from $49,700 plus on-road costs, about $2000 more than a smaller Mini five-door hatch.



Mini Australia reported 207 Clubmans as sold last year, representing seven per cent of its total sales – and down 40 per cent on 2021 sales.

Alex Misoyannis

Alex Misoyannis has been writing about cars since 2017, when he started his own website, Redline. He contributed for Drive in 2018, before joining CarAdvice in 2019, becoming a regular contributing journalist within the news team in 2020.

Cars have played a central role throughout Alex’s life, from flicking through car magazines at a young age, to growing up around performance vehicles in a car-loving family.

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