We love car brands here at the Gear Patrol motoring desk — the more quirkiness and variety on the market the better, as far as we’re concerned. But building cars can be a brutal industry in the most table of times, and the industry is entering a time of major transition. Converting from combustion power to battery-electric will be the biggest transportation shift since the world moved from horses to automobiles. And even that substantial change may pale compared to the widespread societal effects of burgeoning autonomous driving technology.
Change will open spaces for new automotive brands to emerge and thrive. But some marques — even long established ones — could be at risk if they get the transition wrong. Here are five automotive brands that may not be around 1o years from now.
Jaguar

Jaguar Land Rover announced its “Reimagine” strategy back in 2021. For Land Rover, it means electrifying. For Jaguar, it means a soup-to-nuts reimagining of the entire brand.
Jaguar plans to be purely electric by 2025. Reportedly, that will happen on a bespoke EV platform and with a dramatic move upmarket to take on the likes of Bentley rather than Volvo and Audi.
The plans feel sweeping — and nebulous. Little information has leaked out since, and the CEO spearheading the aforementioned Jaguar transition just resigned. Jaguar Land Rover will continue to face ongoing financial pressures; if the current plans falter, there aren’t many other moves for Jaguar to make.