❌

Normal view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.
Yesterday β€” 3 July 2025Main stream

Lancia Is Reviving Its Most Iconic Nameplate

  • Lancia is bringing back the HF Integrale badge on the future Gamma and Delta models.
  • The new-age performance hatch could share its electrified powertrain with the Ypsilon HF.

Lancia spent years as one of Europe’s weakest car brands, with a bare-bones lineup and almost no sales outside Italy. Its outdated third-generation Ypsilon clung to life for 14 years before finally being replaced last year. Now, under Stellantis, the brand is showing signs of revival. A higher-performance Ypsilon HF has just launched, but something more exciting is already on the horizon.

In a press release earlier this week tied to the launch of the Ypsilon Rally6 race car, Lancia quietly revealed plans to revive what is arguably its most iconic nameplate: HF Integrale. Likely because the project is still in its early stages, Lancia’s revelation was short on details, but it did confirm the name will be used on the new Gamma and Delta.

Read: One Lancia Ypsilon HF Is Fast The Other Just Pretends

β€œHF will become the defining feature of all the high-performance versions within the new Lancia lineup,” the automaker confirmed, β€œtoday on the Ypsilon model and soon to appear in 2026 on the upcoming Gamma and Delta with the β€˜HF Integrale’ label.”

Integrale, But With A Twist

Importantly, the HF Integrale versions of the new Gamma and Delta won’t mirror the original Delta HF Integrale. In its first generation form (and not the one that followed), that car earned its reputation in the World Rally Championship, powered by a turbocharged four-cylinder engine. The upcoming Delta, by contrast, is expected to be an electric vehicle, which, yes, may disappoint some purists.

 Lancia Is Reviving Its Most Iconic Nameplate

According to a report from Autocar, the new Delta will be a sibling to the Vauxhall Mokka and is expected to ride on Stellantis’ CMP platform. While this architecture supports both internal combustion and electric powertrains, only high-performance EVs have been released on it so far, such as the new Lancia Ypsilon HF and the Peugeot e-208 GTI

If the Delta HF Integrale shares the same setup, it would likely feature a single electric motor producing 280 horsepower and 245 pound-feet of torque.

As for the Gamma, Lancia hasn’t revealed much. An HF Integrale version hasn’t been shown yet, and even the standard model is still under wraps. What we do know is that Lancia teased it late last year and confirmed it will be available as both a hybrid and an EV. More specifics will likely follow as the 2026 launch approaches.

 Lancia Is Reviving Its Most Iconic Nameplate
Lancia Ypsilon HF
❌
❌