Alfa Romeo has always walked a fine line between heritage and survival. Once revered as a maker of soulful Italian sedans and sports cars, the brand has spent much of the last decade retooling itself for the SUV age. But the sales results from the first half of 2025 reveal a stark and somewhat surprising contrast between Alfa’s performance in the U.S. and its home continent of Europe.
Sales Collapse in America
When Stellantis published its midyear U.S. sales data, the numbers for Alfa Romeo were sobering. From January through June, the brand moved just 3,164 vehicles—down a staggering 34% year-over-year. All three models in the American portfolio suffered: the Giulia sedan dropped 32%, the Stelvio SUV fell 40%, and even the newer Tonale dipped 28%.
Such results may prompt questions about Alfa Romeo’s viability in the States, a market where competition is fierce and consumer tastes increasingly skew toward premium SUVs and electric offerings. But across the Atlantic, the picture is surprisingly different.
European Renaissance
According to data from the European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association (ACEA), Alfa Romeo surged by 33.3% in Europe during the same period, delivering 33,116 vehicles. That’s more than ten times the U.S. tally—an incredible turnaround for a brand that was often seen as an endangered species just a few years ago.
So what explains the discrepancy?
It boils down to one key factor: the Alfa Romeo Junior.
The Junior Effect
The Junior is Alfa’s new subcompact crossover—a smaller, more affordable alternative to the Tonale. Built on the same Stellantis CMP platform as the Peugeot 2008, Opel Mokka, Jeep Avenger, and Fiat 600, the Junior has struck a chord with European buyers looking for stylish utility in a compact package. Crucially, the Junior isn’t sold in the U.S., where Alfa’s lineup remains limited and arguably overpriced relative to its German and Japanese rivals.
Its absence from the American market leaves a gap that no amount of brand heritage can fill. While Europe embraces the Junior as a practical yet aspirational daily driver, U.S. customers are left choosing between the aging Giulia and the pair of SUVs—neither of which have captured significant mainstream attention.
SUVs: Necessary Compromises
Critics have long lamented Alfa Romeo’s turn toward crossovers, accusing the brand of abandoning its sporting DNA. But in 2025, the conversation has shifted. SUVs aren’t just a trend—they’re a financial lifeline. Without models like the Stelvio, Tonale, and now the Junior, Alfa Romeo might not even be in the conversation anymore.
Stellantis’s platform-sharing strategy across its brands means that vehicles like the Junior are both cost-effective to produce and flexible in design. This strategy also helps fund halo models like the striking 33 Stradale, a limited-run supercar based on the Maserati MC20. Such cars may not generate volume, but they serve an important role in maintaining Alfa’s mystique.
Perspective in the Premium Segment
Despite its recent European success, Alfa Romeo is still a niche player compared to the German heavyweights. BMW, Mercedes-Benz, and Audi each sold well over 300,000 vehicles in Europe during the same six-month period. Even Lexus, long a fringe brand on the continent, edged out Alfa with 40,396 units sold (+11.4%).
Still, Alfa’s 33% jump is a positive sign—and it places the brand in a stronger position than its cousin Maserati, which continues to struggle for volume and visibility.
What’s Next for Alfa Romeo?
Looking ahead, the Giulia remains the lone traditional car in Alfa’s range, but change is coming. The next-generation Giulia is set to break with convention, evolving into a five-door liftback with a slightly raised suspension—something akin to the Peugeot 408 or Citroën C5 X. It’s a format that splits the difference between sedan and SUV, aiming to satisfy multiple market demands without stepping on the Stelvio’s toes.
Meanwhile, the fate of long-rumored sports car revivals like the GTV and 8C remains uncertain. However, Alfa’s marketing chief Cristiano Fiorio offers a glimmer of hope: “We can dream,” he says—suggesting that as long as the SUV lineup performs, the brand might eventually return to its performance roots.
Alfa Romeo’s 2025 is a story of contradictions: failure in one region, revival in another. The brand’s European momentum, driven largely by the Junior, showcases the power of platform strategy and market-specific product planning. But without a similar effort in North America, Alfa Romeo risks becoming a regional player rather than the global icon it once was.
Still, with fresh product on the horizon and a stronger foothold in Europe, the brand may yet find a way to balance passion with pragmatism—one crossover at a time.
Source: ACEA, Stellantis