Audi Is Giving Up on Sedans. Buyers Might Not Return the Favor.

The Q9 enters the most crowded segment in luxury vehicles. The RS7 exits a loyal one. Somewhere in that transaction, Audi is trading the identity it spent four decades building for a segment it is late to.

I drive a 2019 RS3. APR tune on the ECU and TCU, which means it does things from a stoplight that Audi's current marketing department would probably prefer I not mention. It is emphatically a sedan — compact, low, quick in a way that has nothing to do with practicality and everything to do with why people became Audi buyers in the first place.

Audi's 2026 US model plan is pointing somewhere else entirely.

The brand has seven new or refreshed models announced globally for the year. Four of them are not coming to the United States. The ones that are: a Q7 refresh and the Q9, a full-size SUV entering the most congested segment in luxury vehicles. The Escalade, the Navigator, the GLS 580, the BMW X7, the QX80 — the Q9 is walking into a fight that has been going on for a decade without Audi in it. That is a choice. So is what is leaving.

The S7 is gone from the US market. The RS7's future is unclear. A8 production has been uncertain long enough that the question is no longer when the next generation arrives but whether it matters when it does. Audi built its American reputation on quattro and performance sedans. The A4 won buyers who wanted something better than a BMW without the BMW premium. The S6 and S8 were fast cars that could carry luggage without announcing themselves. The RS line created buyers who would argue about Audi the way other people argue about football teams.


Those buyers have not gone anywhere. BMW is still selling M3s and M5s to people who will wait eighteen months for a specific paint code. Genesis launched the G80 Sport and the G90 into a market that was supposed to have moved on from sedans, and both cars found buyers at prices that require a real conversation with yourself. Porsche sells the Panamera at $90,000 and up, and keeps selling it. Performance sedan buyers exist. They are not evaporating. They are just not currently being courted by Audi.

The parallel to Audi's EV bet is hard to miss. The e-tron lineup arrived positioned not as an option within the portfolio but as the direction the whole brand was heading. The product quality was real. The timing was not. Sales were fine. Conversion of loyal ICE Audi buyers to the electric lineup fell short of projections. The market was interested but not ready to change its behavior on the timeline Audi had drawn up. The result was a capable product that underperformed against expectations built on trend projections rather than actual buyer signals.

The sedan retreat follows the same logic. SUVs dominate volume in premium. The Q5 has been Audi's best-selling vehicle in the United States for years. The business case for Q7 and Q9 investment is not hard to make. What gets harder to justify is doing it at the expense of the product that differentiated the brand from every other German luxury SUV maker. Audi is not the only option if you want a well-engineered German SUV. It is one of a very short list if you want a performance sedan with quattro and a real lineage behind it.


Top-down bets on projected buyer behavior are a specific kind of mistake. They differ from simply building a bad car. You can build a good car, price it well, and still be wrong about whether your actual buyers are ready to go where you want to take them. The Macan Electric is a good car. Porsche sold more outgoing gas Macans than Macan Electrics in Q1 2026. The market told Porsche something the product quality did not. Audi is making the same kind of call on sedans — reading where the trend line is pointing rather than where its specific buyers are.

The Q9 will sell. Full-size luxury SUVs sell. Audi will enter a new segment and generate volume and call that a success. What will not be measured is the buyer who wanted an RS7 in 2027, found that door closed, and ended up in an M5 because BMW left that door open. That buyer does not show up in Q9 numbers. They show up in BMW's.

Audi's American story was built on something specific: the idea that the best performance car you could buy might not have the most obvious badge. The quattro mythology was earned on rally stages and proved on public roads in cars that sat close to the ground and had no business being as fast as they were. That story lives in sedans. The Q9 is a capable vehicle entering a crowded segment with a strong brand behind it. It is not that story. And stories, once a brand stops telling them, are harder to pick back up than product timelines suggest.

I am not in the market for a Q9. I am in the market for whatever comes after an RS3 when an RS3 stops being enough car. That answer is supposed to live somewhere in Audi's lineup. Right now, it is not obvious where.


Steven Mitchell covers the gap between what automakers announce and what buyers actually do. He has 177 bylines in CBT News and writes at creativeguysteve.com.

Frequently Asked Questions
Is Audi discontinuing sedans in the US market?

Audi has phased the S7 out of the US market and has not confirmed a clear path forward for the RS7 or a next-generation A8. While no blanket announcement covers the entire sedan lineup, the brand's 2026 US product additions are both SUVs. The direction is clear even without a formal statement.

What is the Audi Q9?

The Q9 is Audi's new full-size SUV, entering a segment that already includes the Cadillac Escalade, Lincoln Navigator, BMW X7, Mercedes-Benz GLS, and Infiniti QX80. It represents Audi's attempt to compete at the top of the SUV volume tier, a segment the brand has not previously occupied.

Why is Audi focusing on SUVs instead of performance sedans?

The Q5 has been Audi's best-selling vehicle in the US for several years, and SUVs drive the majority of premium volume across the market. The business case for SUV investment is easy to make. The trade-off is reduced focus on the performance sedan segment that historically defined Audi's American identity.

How does Audi's sedan strategy compare to BMW and Genesis?

BMW continues to develop and sell the M3 and M5 to a committed buyer base. Genesis has successfully launched the G80 Sport and G90 in a market that was supposed to have moved past sedans. Both brands demonstrate that performance and luxury sedan buyers still exist in volume — they are choosing other brands.

Does Audi's sedan strategy repeat its EV strategy mistake?

The structural pattern is similar. Audi's EV push bet on a buyer adoption timeline that proved too aggressive. The sedan exit bets on a buyer behavior shift that BMW and Genesis are actively disproving. Both decisions prioritize projected trends over current buyer signals from Audi's own audience.

What happened to the Audi RS7 in the US?

The RS7's future in the US market is unclear. The car has not been formally discontinued but has also not had a confirmed next-generation timeline communicated for the American market, leaving RS sedan buyers without a clear option within the brand.

Is the Audi Q9 a good buy?

As a product, the Q9 is expected to be well-engineered and capable. The competitive challenge is that it enters the most saturated segment in luxury vehicles, where established nameplates have years of brand equity and dealer network depth. Being good is the floor in that segment, not the differentiator.

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