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Skoda Proves Wagons Aren’t Dead Yet With Octavia EV Concept

  • Skoda debuted electric Vision O compact wagon at the Munich Auto Show.
  • Ignore the rear-hinged rear doors and you’re looking at the next Octavia.
  • A cousin of 2028’s VW ID. Golf, the Octavia will ride on VW’s SSP platform.

Update: We’ve now added a set of photos from the Munich motor show, offering a closer look at Skoda’s Vision O concept. The new images give a better sense of how this design study could evolve into the next-generation of the popular Octavia series.

After a slow start, Skoda has fully embraced the SUV body style, but the brand’s new Vision O concept proves it still believes in the traditional Octavia wagon. The low-slung compact previews a production Octavia due by 2028, which is a close cousin of the upcoming VW ID. Golf.

Related: Skoda’s Smallest Electric SUV Comes With Gas-Car Pricing

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Photos Stefan Baldauf & Guido ten Brink

Like the ID. Golf, the Octavia is going electric, and the Vision O’s long-roof form tells us it’ll be available in practical wagon guise as well as a fastback. Why is Skoda bothering with either car in these SUV-crazed times? Because the current Octavia is the brand’s best selling model and a major cash-cow.

Design That Stands Apart

Skoda’s designers have applied the company’s latest Modern Solid design language to the Vision O and although some of concept’s flourishes – like the rear-hinged rear doors and 3D-printed honeycomb headrests – are pure auto show theatrics, what you see here is mostly what you’ll get in a Skoda dealer in three years’ time.

The prominent body-color B pillar that extends from rear door’s skin reminds us of DS Automobiles’ work and there are hints of Opel Astra about the blocky shapes. Even so, the flat-faced, square-shaped fenders, blacked-out C-pillar and concave rear end with its Skoda lettering picked out in LEDs, plus the aggressive tech-loop nose, give this Vision O way more presence that any production Octavia ever had.

Tech-Heavy Interior

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If the O looks confident on the outside, it looks even more premium on the inside. Instead of a traditional instrument cluster behind the steering wheel, there’s a 1.2-m (47.2 inches) Horizon Display stretching almost the full width of the car at the base of the windshield.

That’s backed up by a portrait-layout tablet touchscreen floating proud of the dashboard and above a console fitted with dual charging trays and a rotary mode controller that offers haptic feedback. And if you’re too lazy to twiddle a dial, the Laura AI voice-activate digital assistant can handle some of those same tasks.

At 4,850 mm (190.9 inches) long, the concept is 152 mm (6 inches) longer than today’s production Octavia wagon, but still smaller than the Superb flagship. The huge trunk swallows 650 liters (CCC cu-ft) of family junk or salesman’s paraphernalia with the seats up – and that’s not where the practical touches end. In addition to a portable Bluetooth speaker and integrated fridge, the concept has four umbrellas.

New Octavia EV with Rivian Tech?

Whether those features will make it to the production car in 2027 or 2028, and what kind of power output and range figures the SSP platform can deliver, Skoda isn’t saying. But reports say we should expect 800-volt charging tech and advanced software developed with Rivian. And you can bank on Skoda rolling out a hot vRS version with even more attitude than this concept.

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Skoda

The Next Octavia Will Be Very Different From What You Imagine

  • Skoda is teasing the Vision O wagon concept heading for September’s Munich IAA show.
  • The Vision O previews the next-generation electric Octavia, which is due on sale by 2029.
  • It’s twinned with the next VW ID.Golf, but a longer wheelbase brings more space inside.

Update: With the Munich IAA show drawing closer, Skoda has released another shadowy teaser of its upcoming Vision O Wagon, this time offering a glimpse of the interior. The latest images reveal little more than the panoramic roof and a few 3D-printed details.

Skoda says the interior concept is designed to balance simplicity with practicality, combining clean lines and airy 3D-printed headrests with plant-based, compostable materials that help reduce the car’s environmental footprint.

“The interior design concept of the Vision O showcases our commitment to combining simplicity and sustainability with enhanced comfort,” said Oliver Stefani, Head of Skoda Design. “The combination of clean lines and intuitive functionality reflect our efforts to create a harmonious and functional interior. It features materials and design elements that are not only aesthetically an evolution of our Modern Solid design language but also emphasize environmental responsibility.”

The original story continues below.

 The Next Octavia Will Be Very Different From What You Imagine

It’s a great time to be a Skoda salesman. The Czech company’s registrations were up 13.6 percent in the first six months of 2025 due in no small part to the success of its electric SUVs, the Elroq and Enyaq. They’ll be joined this year by the smaller Epiq, but today Skoda reminded us that its big-selling sedans and wagons are also getting the EV treatment.

VW’s non-nonsense Czech brand is teasing the Vision O concept it will reveal in full at the Munich IAA in September. The ‘O’ tells us it previews the next-generation Octavia compact, which is due on sale before the end of the decade and features an EV drivetrain for the first time.

Related: Your Insane Appetite For SUVs Is Killing Skoda’s Dreams Of Fun Sports Cars, But There’s Hope

A single silhouetted image shows the unmistakable profile of a wagon, and one that looks sportier than anything Skoda has produced up until now. The windshield is swept back into a low roofline that drops slightly at the rear, where it’s met by a rear hatch angled to earn style and aero efficiency points, rather than luggage-carrying ones.

There’s a definite Audi feel to the design, which calls to mind the A6 e-tron Avant from sister company Audi, though the front and rear LED signature makes clear this is Skoda’s work. Skoda says the concept will show how the brand is developing its Modern Solid design language for the next generation of its cars.

 The Next Octavia Will Be Very Different From What You Imagine
Skoda
 The Next Octavia Will Be Very Different From What You Imagine

Under the skin, the next Octavia isn’t twinned with the bigger A6 e-tron, which uses VW’s PPE platform, but the smaller VW ID.Golf that’s due to hit showrooms by 2029, around the same time as the Skoda. The Golf and Octavia EVs will ride on the Group’s SSP platform, and each gets 800-volt charging tech, but a longer wheelbase and overall length mean the Skoda will offer more interior and luggage space, and should cost slightly less. Owners have long argued that the Octavia is the best Golf.

Single and dual-motor powertrains will be on the menu when the production car hits the street in three to four years, but don’t expect it to render the current combustion Octavia obsolete immediately. The popularity of hybrid powertrains in Europe means the two models will likely overlap for some time.

The gallery below contains renderings Skoda released in 2023 when it first revealed plans for an electric Octavia.

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Skoda

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