Currently reading: Six new DS models planned by 2023

Plug-in hybrid DS 7 Crossback E-Tense is the first car in the brand's product offensive, with plans for 33% of total sales to be electrified by 2025

DS will launch one model a year until at least 2023, with a target of 33% of sales to be hybrids or electric vehicles by the middle of the next decade. 

Each of the six confirmed models will have an electrified version, which the brand claims will benefit from its EV know-how honed in its involvement in the Formula E championship.

The first of these is the recently revealed DS 7 Crossback - the brand’s answer to the BMW X3 - which will get an E-Tense petrol-electric plug-in hybrid variant with 296bhp and an electric-only range of 60 miles. The E-Tense will get an eight-speed automatic 'box, and will be available from spring 2019. 

There’s no cap on where the brand’s one-model-per-year strategy will end, but six models are planned at the moment. More will come later. 

The six confirmed launches will be a mixture of all-new market entries for the brand, as well as replacements for existing models. Some of these will be indirect replacements, explained a DS spokesman, where the model name would be carried over, but the car would be different to its predecessor, and wouldn’t necessarily occupy the same market.

Despite the high power output of the DS 7 Crossback E-Tense and subsequent plug-in hybrid models, the DS Performance badge will not be discontinued; the two will coexist. It’s not yet known if the Performance badge will spread to larger models than the brand’s entry-level DS 3, though. 

The use of the E-Tense name for variants on more mass-market friendly models somewhat undermines the possibility of an E-Tense supercar under the brand; the spokesman said that such a model is not a priority, but didn’t rule out the now more distant possibility of a halo car in the future. 

Read more: 

2017 DS 7 Crossback on sale in La Premiere edition from £42,650

DS E-Tense supercar edges closer to production

DS 3 Performance long-term test review: taking on a track day

Autocar confidential: Mazda, Seat, BMW, DS

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androo 15 June 2017

I'm surprised they aren't planning to wind DS up

DS has not been a great success so far it seems to me, and I don't see where the brand is going. Its fundamental problem is the name. Unless you're French and pronounce it properly, it's just two random letters. How many people in this country would look at you with puzzlement if you said you were thinking of buying a DS? They'd say, "A DS what?", or, "A what DS?" To break through this big problem, the cars have to be astounding. But they're not even all that good. The DS7 looks like a generic Korean SUV. It needs to look like a 'DS', but nobody knows what that is or what it's supposed to look like. It's not going to work. DS will be dead within five years.
streaky 16 June 2017

That's the problem!

androo wrote:

To break through this big problem, the cars have to be astounding. But they're not even all that good.

You've hit the nail on the head - much has been promised but every new model is a disappointment; naff styling and poor ride. If only DS would look back at the USPs of many of its Citroen predecessors and come up with ultra sleek futuristic styling and fabulous comfort and it might get somewhere. But then why not let Citroen itself do that and forget DS altogether?

rmcondo 15 June 2017

I think that the DS separate

I think that the DS separate brand strategy has run its course, particularly with the acquisition of Vauxhall Opel and the Ambassador brands. These are Citroens and the going upmarket plans can better be achieved by all or most Citroens being DSs, leaving other brands to occupy other market sectors. C1, C3 and C4 would be better raised to DS status or left to Peugeot along with commercial vehicles and Picasso models. If they're going to manage the greater number of brands they will need to distinguish them better rather than having them all compete against each other in the same sectors and segments. Which are their Dacia, Alfa Romeo, Buick, Volvo, Mercedes?
catnip 15 June 2017

Still no mention of a

Still no mention of a replacement for DS's best model, the DS3? Surely this should be a priority for them, though the direction the company's design is heading doesn't give me confidence it will be worth waiting for.
stumpys182 15 June 2017

catnip wrote:

catnip wrote:

Still no mention of a replacement for DS's best model, the DS3? Surely this should be a priority for them, though the direction the company's design is heading doesn't give me confidence it will be worth waiting for.

In a meeting tail end of last week with what Autocar would call a 'Citroen insider' and more than a couple of hints were dropped suggesting that there is now no plans to replace the DS3!! General feeling within PSA seems to be that the new C3 does the job and that the DS brand will become mainly SUV or Crossover based going forward. They may keep the DS3 name, but it'll likely become more of a Juke-type rival and probably 5 door only. Have to say, much as I like the direction both Citroen & DS are taking regarding styling, I cant help but think that separating the brands is just a very expensive folly and will ultimately end up with one brand becoming a casualty, if not both. Just by dropping the Citroen chevrons from the DS models, does not mean that the buying public will suddenly view DS as a 'premium brand' in the same vein as Audi, BMW, Merc etc. To many, badge is everything.