25 Ugly Cars That Should Have Never Left the Assembly Line

Ugly cars

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01 Chrysler PT Cruiser
01 Chrysler PT Cruiser by Greg Gjerdingen (CC BY)

Rough Rides

Design might be subjective, but when it's time to drop thousands of dollars on a car, we want the thing to look good — or, at the very least, not eye-searingly bad. 


But despite their best intentions, car companies often miss the mark and make vehicles that land on lists of ugly cars. In many cases, that also means sales go down the tubes, though some bizarre cars soldier on for years, developing a decent following. Love 'em or hate 'em, here are 25 of the world's ugliest cars.

Pontiac Aztek (2001-2005)
Pontiac Aztek (2001-2005) by Alexander Migl (CC BY-SA)

1. Pontiac Aztek (2001-2005)

Car and Driver doesn't hold back about the much-maligned Aztek, calling it a "minivan-in-drag monstrosity ... It's so powerfully ugly that a blobfish wouldn't be seen next to it." Although the odd auto fusion of an SUV and sporty sedan had a moment in the sun thanks to a starring role in AMC's "Breaking Bad” as Walter White’s ride, it's still among the top vehicles on every car expert's lips when "ugly" is the main criterion.

AMC Pacer
Wikimedia Commons

2. AMC Pacer (1975-1979)

Sure, a lot of ugly, old American cars were made in the '70s (eyes on you, Pintos and El Caminos of the world), many of them by the carmaker AMC. But even among the ugliest cars, the wedge-shaped AMC Pacer was a special kind of ugly. It was a compact, but not really. In fact, AMC pitched it was "the world's first wide-body compact, a segment nobody had ever identified before, much less pined for," according to The Truth About Cars. "An obese compact for obese compact-haters."

Ford Edsel
Ford Edsel by nakhon100 (CC BY)

3. Ford Edsel (1958-1960)

Is it the ugliest car ever? No, but few auto fails were worse than this. A legendary flop of the '50s, the Ford Edsel "was one of those ugly ducklings that never had a swan phase," according to The New York Times. Ford apparently invested some $250 million in the distinctive Edsel, but shifting consumer tastes meant buyers had little love for this flashy cruiser. 


One of the most maligned design features? The grille, which "drew comparisons to an Oldsmobile sucking a lemon, a toilet seat, and other cruder images," notes The Washington Post.

A 2015 Toyota Prius c facelift model.
A 2015 Toyota Prius c facelift model. by Mr.choppers (CC BY-SA)

4. Toyota Prius (2015-Present)

As ubiquitous as the fuel-sipping Toyota Prius is today, it has taken a beating from automotive design buffs. The low point for this hybrid? A 2015 redesign that's still on dealers' lots today left the already-quirky vehicle looking a little like an alien. Of course, that's if you're kind — according to TopSpeed, this Toyota looks like "a double-chinned angry guppy that wants to eat your face." (Hey, it could be worse. For 50-plus mpg and Toyota's reputation for reliability, that's a sacrifice we may be willing to make.) 


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Citroen Ami 6
Citroen Ami 6 by An-d (CC BY-SA)

5. Citroen Ami 6 (1961-1970)

French automaker Citroen desperately needed a midrange car that would hold its own against competitors such as Volkswagen and Renault in the '60s. Instead, it produced the Ami, with an oddly raked back window that didn't exactly appeal to buyers. According to Motor Trend, this was actually a cost-cutting move because the trunk lid could be attached up there to stay open, no prop rod or counter springs necessary. Whatever the case, the result was "the most ungainly design ever."


Related: 52 of the Smallest Cars Ever Made

Chrysler PT Cruiser (2001-2010)
Chrysler PT Cruiser (2001-2010) by Greg Gjerdingen (CC BY)

6. Chrysler PT Cruiser (2001-2010)

The PT Cruiser remains one of the most polarizing cars in recent memory. For every buyer who liked these cars' aggressively retro styling, there were five onlookers tittering about how this auto was hard on the eyes. Count us among the latter camp. 


"The PT was a shrunken minivan, a bloated Neon, a car for families who needed something basic and leaned a little too hard on nostalgia," Jalopnik sneers. Couldn't have said it better ourselves.


Related: Vintage Car Design Features You Don’t See Anymore

Ford Taurus
Wikimedia Commons

7. Ford Taurus (1996-1999)

Why mess with success? That's the moral of the story for Ford, which saw sales plummet after redesigning its popular Taurus in 1996 with ovals — lots of ovals — creating an odd effect perhaps best likened a squashed marshmallow on wheels. Road and Track even calls the third-generation Taurus "the saddest car ever made," and noted that Ford never competed seriously in the sedan segment again.


Related: Most Iconic Movie and TV Cars

1961 Plymouth Fury sedan
1961 Plymouth Fury sedan by That Hartford Guy (CC BY-SA)

8. Plymouth Fury (1961)

Just back away slowly from this classic cruiser and no one will get hurt. The 1961 Plymouth Fury lived up to its angry name with a truly menacing-looking front-end "face." It "wasn't the only furrowed brow scowling out of showrooms across the United States in 1961. But it was the one that possibly caused the most nightmares," Curbside Classic writes.


Related: Unique Cars That Should Be Resurrected

Nissan Cube
Wikimedia Commons

9. Nissan Cube (2009-2014)

Nissan always wanted its angular Cube crossover to stand out, but it ended up getting looks for all the wrong reasons. The Los Angeles Times called it an "air-hating box of ugly ... a travesty, a mockery, a baleful parody of auto aerodynamics." Nissan even admitted that the design was built on the idea of a "bulldog in sunglasses" — but, as the Times wonders: "Which end is wearing the sunglasses?"

Suzuki X-90 (1996-1998)
Wikimedia Commons

10. Suzuki X-90 (1996-1998)

"It's a no-butt, bubble of a thing, a laugher if ever there was one," The Washington Post writes of the Suzuki X-90. "It comes with a chopped-off tail, mostly glass canopy, bug-eyed headlamps and bulging fenders. It's so ugly, it's funny. It's so funny, it's cute." 


Sadly, there weren't many buyers who came down on the "cute" side of the fence, and Suzuki halted production on this bizarre little SUV after a few years.

Pontiac Trans Sport (1990-1996)
Wikimedia Commons

11. Pontiac Trans Sport (1990-1996)

The fundamental truth of minivans is that they aren't cool or easy on the eyes, and carmakers are probably better off embracing this fact than pretending otherwise. But poor Pontiac didn't get that memo before designing the oddly pointy Trans Sport, which the auto company described as the "space vehicle of the 90s." (We suppose that does sound better than "Dust Buster on wheels.") Starting in the year 1997, Pontiac dropped the futuristic styling in favor of a more traditional look.

1977 CitiCar 2 Dr. Coupe (Electric vehicle)
1977 CitiCar 2 Dr. Coupe (Electric vehicle) by T442163 (CC BY-SA)

12. Vanguard CitiCar (1974-1977)

We'll forgive you if you mistake the CitiCar for an amusement park ride or an outsize wedge of cheese. In reality, this weird, triangular little contraption was an electric car built to appeal to consumers during the American oil crisis in the mid-'70s, the same era as the AMC Pacer. 


"It was a glorified golf cart which must have been absolutely miserable to drive in actual traffic," opines CarBuzz, noting that the car produced a top speed of 25 mph and a whopping 40-mile range. Amazingly, around 4,400 of them actually sold.

Subaru Brat
Wikimedia Commons

13. Subaru Brat (1978-1994)

Small pickups had somewhat of a heyday back in the '70s and '80s, so Subaru decided to get on the action and "hacked the end off an existing station wagon," according to Jalopnik. The result was a bizarre car-truck mashup called the BRAT (er, the "Bi-drive Recreational All-Terrain Transporter") that was somehow produced all the way up through the year 1994. It was even built with two rear-facing jump seats that helped Subaru call it a family vehicle and evade taxes on imported pickup trucks. 

Fiat Multipla (1998-2004)
Wikimedia Commons

14. Fiat Multipla (1998-2004)

The Fiat Multipla never made it ashore in the U.S., but this cartoonishly bulging, bug-eyed family hauler is too ugly not to include here. Practical as it may have been and built with plenty of headroom and space for passengers or cargo, the Multipla's original unique look lasted only a few years before a redesign in the year 2004. CarThrottle's readers even dubbed it "the ugliest car ever made," with the Fiat Multipla outpacing everyone's favorite design whipping boy, the Pontiac Aztek.

Lexus SC 430 (2001-2005)
Wikimedia Commons

15. Lexus SC 430 (2001-2005)

Luxury cars aren't immune to design missteps, and the Lexus SC 430 is all the proof you need. Panned by car lovers as a strangely ill-proportioned bathtub of a car, it definitely didn't meet the high expectations for buyers willing to spend big on a powerful convertible. It was even derided by Top Gear as "the worst car in the world" — ouch. 


"Whoa doggies, it's ugly," Jalopnik says. "Maybe ugly is too harsh a word. ... Frumpy, maybe? Dumpy? Something with an -umpy at its end for certain."

Red Yugo GV in Junction Triangle, Toronto, Canada.
Red Yugo GV in Junction Triangle, Toronto, Canada. by Michael Gil (CC BY)

16. Yugo GV (1985-1992)

The Yugo is low-hanging fruit for many lists of bad cars, but we'd be remiss if we didn't mention that, aside from all of its well-documented quality problems, it was also really, really ugly. This rickety little hatchback was built to be as cheap as possible, and it shows in the stripped-down, boxy exterior. 


"From the moment you walk up to a Yugo, you're struck by a little bit of sadness," Autotrader says. "Regardless of why you feel it, you feel it. You know you're going to be disappointed." 

Marcos Mantis M70 (1970)
Marcos Mantis M70 (1970) by Steve Glover (CC BY)

17. Marcos Mantis M70 (1970-1972)

Dubbed "the car that makes the Aztek look pretty" by Autotrader, the Marcos Mantis was an obscure British sports car built with a bizarrely long "snout" and abysmal sales: Only a few dozen were sold before the company went bankrupt. 


"No one seems to know how many Mantis models still exist; presumably, no mere mortal has the gastrointestinal fortitude to count them," Autotrader says. Maybe the company was shooting for a James-Bond-Aston-Martin look; though, to be fair, the other British manufacturer also missed the mark with its supremely ugly Aston Martin Lagonda.

Nissan Juke (2011-2017)
Wikimedia Commons
Lincoln MKT (2010-Present)
Wikimedia Commons

19. Lincoln MKT (2010-2020)

A crossover that can haul a laughable amount of junk in its oversized trunk, the Lincoln MKT changed little after it was unveiled in 2010. And that's ... unfortunate, unless you're into cars with disproportionate rear ends (hey, we won't judge). 


The Daily Drive calls it one of the ugliest SUVs of the past 20 years. "There's really no way around this: The MKT is ungainly ... The overall look is not unlike a wheelbarrow rolling backwards."

Mitsuoka Orochi (2007-2014)
Mitsuoka Orochi (2007-2014) by 韋駄天狗 (CC BY-SA)

20. Mitsuoka Orochi (2007-2014)

And now for something completely different. Japanese cars are more design-forward than their American counterparts, but there's a difference between pushing the envelope and setting it on fire. The Mitsuoka Orochi, a limited-edition six-figure sports car, is best placed in the latter category. 


"The front end is absolutely bizarre, in the sense that it looks like the designer tried very hard to make the car look like it was smiling, or possibly eating something," notes Autotrader. "I truly believe it was modeled on an image of some sort of happy-looking animal."

Hyundai Tiburon (2000-2001)
Wikimedia Commons

21. Hyundai Tiburon (2000-2001)

Back when Hyundai was still trying to hold its own in the U.S. market, it decided to take a risk with the sporty coupe's redesign. For many observers, it was a swing and a miss, making the car look worse and landing it on Jalopnik's list of "The Ten Worst Automotive Face-lifts of All Time." The new Tiburon was an "insect-eyed monstrosity ... It looks like it came out of the black lagoon," the auto news site laments. Still, Hyundai got the last laugh, with sales that jumped markedly in 2000. 

1991 Chevrolet Caprice Classic
1991 Chevrolet Caprice Classic by Mr.choppers (CC BY-SA)

22. Chevrolet Caprice (1991-1992)

"It looked like an upside-down bathtub," admitted one GM worker of the 1991 Chevrolet Caprice, a car that had built nearly a three-decade legacy of strong sales. But this redesigned full-size sedan was a bust. Fortune called it "a beached whale," while the slightly kinder Washington Post called it "bulbous." However you describe it, sales were disappointing, and it lasted only a couple of years before getting a face-lift.

Nissan S-Cargo ( G20 )
Nissan S-Cargo ( G20 ) by Tennen-Gas (CC BY-SA)

23. Nissan S-Cargo (1989-1991)

For anyone keeping score, this marks Honda rival Nissan's third entry on the "ugly cars" list — a dubious distinction, to be sure. The S-Cargo, a small cargo van, was sold only in Japan from 1989 to 1991. 


"What makes it so ugly? Well, all of it," Autotrader sneers. "The entire car has all these curves, circles and arches, and then the rear end just stops. Abruptly. With no explanation." There's also the fact that it resembles a snail, with a name that sounds suspiciously like "escargot." We see what you did there, Nissan.

Isuzu Vehicross (1999-2001)
Wikimedia Commons

24. Isuzu VehiCross (1999-2001)

About a decade before it decided to leave the U.S. market, Isuzu tried to give buyers an SUV that looked distinctive, fun, and a touch futuristic. So it produced the VehiCross, a limited-edition vehicle that inspired both cheers and jeers. While it snagged a decent enough review from Motor Trend (though they do call the VehiCross "a Toyota RAV4 on high-potency steroids," others pulled few punches. 


"No one wants a three-door SUV that looks like an escapee from the set of 'Battlestar Galactica,' " deadpans Car and Driver.

Bustle-back Cadillac Seville produced from 1980–1985.
Bustle-back Cadillac Seville produced from 1980–1985. by dave_7 (CC BY)

25. Cadillac Seville (1981-1985)

The redesigned Cadillac Seville was supposed to help GM make news by marking the start of the '80s in head-turning style. It did make news and it certainly got people to look, if only to do a double-take when they realized just how ugly a Caddy could be. 


Designed with a retro "bustle back," the new Seville notched disappointing sales, likely because the engine was just as bad as the design. "A near-perfect synthesis of wretched design and ruinous engineering," Curbside Classic concludes. Tell us how you really feel.