worst car names

The Worst Car Names Ever

What do impacts, citations and flat tires have in common? Theyā€™re all things we absolutely do not want to happen when driving a car.

And yet, they are all terms automakers have used to name vehicles. (OK, flat tire is not the name of a car, but Reventon is, which translates to flat tire in Spanish). The lapse in foresight and good judgment immediately places these monikers among the worst car names in history.

Unfortunately, these three are far from alone. Throughout automotive history, countless bad names have come and gone. From the bizarre to the truly uninspiring, with a number of simply bad ideas mixed in, here are some of the worst names ever bestowed upon an automobile.

Studebaker Dictator

Itā€™s hard to imagine a period when this name would have ever worked, but Studebaker picked the absolute worst time in history to try to sell the American driving public on the Dictator: the advent of World War II.

Interestingly, the model was originally known as the Standard Six. Studebaker began renaming its cars in the 1920s. Although no one could have predicted the future, the automaker sensed enough trouble in the air to use the name Director in the European market.

Dictator lasted a decade on this side of the pond before it became too tarnished a word for Studebaker, which opted to swap in the name Commander in 1937.

Ferrari LaFerrari

If youā€™re unfamiliar with the beauty that is the Italian language, this name translates to ā€œFerrari the Ferrari.ā€ The Italian carmaker was aiming for the contextual interpretation of the ā€œdefinitiveā€ Ferrari, but the name just sounds awkward and lazy.

worst car names
(Photo: SenseiAlan)

Renault LeCar

In competition with LaFerrari for the least original car name is Renaultā€™s entry: The Car.

Mitsubishi Minica Lettuce

Lettuce has many positive attributes: Itā€™s a good source of vitamins A and K, helps strengthen bones and has even been shown to improve your sleep. It also plays an indispensable role in a BLT. Shockingly, none of these facts served as inspiration for Mitsubishiā€™s naming of the Minica Lettuce.

Developed in partnership with the Japanese supermarket chain Seiyu, the car was designed specifically for loading and unloading groceries. The tiny sedan, which had two doors on the passenger side but just one on the driver side, was small enough to travel on small streets suited more for bicycles and rickshaws.

As for the name, Lettuce was the title of a shopping magazine published by Seiyu, which also sold the car right there in its grocery stores.

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Isuzu Mysterious Utility Wizard

The Wizard was simply ahead of its time. If it had debuted in the late 1990s instead of the late ā€™80s, it could have ridden the Harry Potter train broom to success. Instead, the MU Wizard has since been left to compete for worst car name ever.

To make matters worse, there doesnā€™t appear to be any story behind the nameā€™s origin. Itā€™s like it just appeared out of thin air.

Nissan Friend-ME

The Friend-ME was a concept car Nissan unveiled in 2013 specifically designed to appeal to Chinese 20-somethings. As such, the sedan had a social media-inspired cabin in which all four passengers had access to the same infotainment screens and could share content from their phones onto said screens. An interesting concept, indeed!

While the carā€™s design highlights the positive attributes of social media, its name reminds us of the worst. It simply reeks of desperation and self-promotion. Nissan even went as far as stylizing it with a capitalized ā€œME.ā€

Toyota Deliboy

This was not some sort of traveling sandwich purveyor mobile, just a tiny delivery truck. Its name is supposedly a portmanteau of the words, ā€œdeliveryā€ and ā€œboy.ā€ Not only was the moniker a failure, so too was the truck itself. Poorly designed and featuring a woefully underpowered engine, the Deliboy was only in production for a few years.

worst car names

Subaru BRAT

Like many car names before and since, BRAT is an acronym. In this case, it stands for ā€œBi-Drive Recreational All-terrain Transporter.ā€ Certainly, Subaru could have gone a different route, but weā€™re not entirely sure the car maker didnā€™t choose the name due to, rather than in spite of, its unruly connotations. The BRAT was marketed to younger (dare we say rebellious), off-roading drivers.

Interestingly, the car was quick to live up to its devilish moniker. BRAT models sold in America featured two rear-facing jump seats in the cargo area. This allowed Japan-based Subaru to classify it as a passenger car rather than a light-duty truck, thus eluding a significantly higher import tax.

Honda Thatā€™s

Honda, thatā€™s a terrible name for a car. The third-generation of the Honda Life had a head-scratching name that was as grammatically awkward as it was flat-out weird. Weā€™re hoping something got lost in translation from the Japanese automaker and no one truly believed this was going to work.

Kia Pro_cee’d

The Pro_cee’d was the sports version of the Kia Cee’d, giving the South Korean automaker two terrible titles in its portfolio. The company later took the bold step of changing the carā€™s name to ProCeed.

Know a terrible car name we missed? Let us know in the comments below!

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89 Thoughts on “The Worst Car Names Ever

  1. Chevy Vega, bad car, bad name, but wish I had kept my 1977 Vega, it apparently is a collector’s item and much more valuable than when it was new.

    1. We had one of those. I believe Ralph Nader felt it was one of the worst American cars ever made. Me? I kind of liked it but what did I know?

    2. I had a Chevy Vega that all most incinerated it self in front of my house. The wiring was faulty and went up in flames. I had only got the car a month before this happened.

  2. The Chevy Nova, which in Spanish ā€œno vaā€ translates to ā€œdoesnā€™t go.ā€

    1. Yeah, surprising that the article missed the Nova. It was pretty widely ridiculed. A very good name in English, but a disaster in the Spanish-speaking market.

        1. The brand name KIA caught me off guard at its inception. That is an acronym for ā€œKilled in actionā€. Terrible for a product that is predominantly in action with a human contained inside of it. Will never buy one of those!!

    2. We had one of those. I believe Ralph Nader felt it was one of the worst American cars ever made. Me? I kind of liked it but what did I know?

    1. While the ones brought up in the article definitely have to be the worst, I agree the Probe is right up there!

  3. My BRAT was my favorite car ever! Not only was the name my wife’s initials spelled backwards, it was great for taking to drive-in movies. The rear facing seats in the bed made viewing the screen fantastic!

    1. Rolls-Royce often names cars after “things” that move about silently. So in English, the only language that counts in UK in fits just fine.

    1. I own a Gremlin, and it always had mechanical problems and started to rust almost immediately. Gremlin was an appropriate description.

  4. Nova translates into “no go” in Spanish. Chevrolet didn’t sell many in those markets.

  5. Another worst car name:

    Chevrolet Nova.

    Nova in Spanish means “no go”.

    It was a flop in the Latin American markets.

    And ultimately everywhere.

    1. How about the I-mark? Isuzu even had an ad making fun of the name! And what’s wrong with Lark?

    2. I had a Lark and still think it was a wonderful car. I was a smoker then and in addition to the mistake of smoking I also made the mistake of trying Lark cigarettes which were awful. But the car was great.

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