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The Future of Auto News

Peugeot — History, Models and Everything You Need to Know

Founded1882
CountryFrance
HQRueil-Malmaison
ParentStellantis

AI-generated concept illustration — Peugeot brand overview. | Rev N Rise

Peugeot is one of the world's oldest car manufacturers and France's most significant automotive brand — a company that has been making vehicles since 1882, won Le Mans three times and pioneered one of the most distinctive interior design concepts in the modern car industry with the i-Cockpit. Today Peugeot is rapidly electrifying its entire lineup while maintaining the French flair and driver focus that has defined its best cars for over a century.

1882Year Founded
3xLe Mans Winner
1M+Vehicles Per Year
The History of Peugeot

The Peugeot family business dates back to 1810 — a steel foundry in Valentigney, eastern France, that produced springs, saws and other steel tools. Armand Peugeot — a grandson of the founder — was captivated by the emerging bicycle industry and began producing Peugeot bicycles in 1882. He then turned his attention to the new petrol engine technology emerging in Germany and produced his first car in 1889 — a steam-powered vehicle — followed by a petrol-engined car using a Panhard & Levassor engine based on a Daimler design in 1890. Armand Peugeot founded Société Anonyme des Automobiles Peugeot as a standalone automotive company in 1896, separating the car business from the family's broader industrial activities.

Peugeot built its 20th century reputation on practical, well-engineered family cars — the Peugeot 205 of 1983 is widely considered one of the greatest small cars ever built. Light, nimble, beautifully balanced and available in a legendary GTI hot hatch variant that defined the genre for a generation, the 205 established the engineering character that Peugeot has pursued ever since. The 205 GTI's combination of a 1.9-litre engine, front-wheel drive and near-perfect weight distribution made it faster through corners than many sports cars of the era. Its legacy defines Peugeot's performance identity to this day.

Peugeot became part of PSA Group — Peugeot Société Anonyme — through the merger with Citroën in 1976 and later acquired Opel and Vauxhall from General Motors in 2017. PSA then merged with Fiat Chrysler Automobiles in 2021 to form Stellantis — making Peugeot part of one of the world's four largest automotive groups.

The i-Cockpit — Peugeot's Design Signature

The Peugeot i-Cockpit — introduced on the 208 in 2012 and now standard across the entire range — is the most distinctive interior design concept in the mainstream European car market. Its defining feature is a small-diameter steering wheel paired with a high-mounted instrument cluster above rather than behind the wheel. The driver looks over the top of the steering wheel at the instruments rather than through it — a layout that creates a more direct, sports-car-like connection between driver and car.

The i-Cockpit divides opinion — some drivers find the layout awkward until they adapt to it, others immediately prefer it to the conventional arrangement. What is not debatable is its effectiveness as a brand differentiator. In a segment where most competitors' interiors are broadly similar, the i-Cockpit makes a Peugeot instantly recognisable and gives the brand a design identity that competitors have been unable to replicate without direct imitation. The latest iteration — i-Cockpit 3D on the new 308 and 3008 — adds a three-dimensional instrument display that adds depth and visual sophistication to the concept.

Peugeot's Current Lineup
208 / e-208
Supermini — petrol, diesel and full EV — strong Europe seller
2008 / e-2008
Compact SUV — petrol and full electric
308 / e-308
Compact family car — PHEV and EV available
3008 / e-3008
Mid-size SUV — EV version on STLA Medium platform
5008 / e-5008
Large 7-seat SUV — EV version 660km WLTP range
408
Fastback crossover — PHEV and petrol — unique segment
Peugeot at Le Mans

Peugeot's motorsport heritage is defined by its Le Mans programme. The brand won the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1992 and 1993 with the 905 — a naturally aspirated V10-powered prototype that defeated every rival across two consecutive years. The 2009 victory was arguably even more dramatic — the Peugeot 908 HDi FAP diesel prototype, powered by a 5.5-litre V12 turbodiesel, defeated Audi's previously dominant R10 TDI diesel programme in one of the most closely contested Le Mans battles ever staged. Peugeot returned to top-level endurance racing in 2022 with the hydrogen-hybrid 9X8 hypercar — a technically ambitious programme that struggled initially but demonstrated the brand's continued commitment to motorsport at the highest level.

What Makes Peugeot Different

Peugeot's competitive advantage in the mainstream European market is its combination of distinctive design, genuine driving dynamics and the i-Cockpit interior concept that makes every Peugeot feel different from every competitor. The 205 GTI and 306 GTI-6 hot hatch legacy gives the brand performance credibility that Volkswagen and Renault earn through engineering — Peugeot earns it through character. The new e-3008 and e-5008 — built on Stellantis's STLA Medium platform with up to 660km of WLTP range — are among the most impressive mainstream electric SUVs launched in Europe in 2024 and 2025, demonstrating that Peugeot's electrification programme is genuinely competitive rather than merely compliant.

Frequently Asked Questions
When was Peugeot founded?
Peugeot was founded in 1882 by Armand Peugeot in Valentigney, France. The Peugeot family business dates back to 1810 as a steel tools manufacturer.
What is the Peugeot i-Cockpit?
The Peugeot i-Cockpit features a small-diameter steering wheel and a raised instrument cluster above the wheel — creating a sports-car-like layout where the driver looks over the wheel at the instruments. It is standard across Peugeot's entire lineup.
What electric cars does Peugeot make?
Peugeot's electric lineup includes the e-208, e-2008, e-308, e-3008 and e-5008. The e-5008 offers up to 660km WLTP range — among the best in its class.
Who owns Peugeot?
Peugeot is owned by Stellantis — formed by the merger of PSA Group and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles in 2021. Stellantis owns 14 brands including Peugeot, Citroën, Fiat, Jeep and Alfa Romeo.
Has Peugeot won Le Mans?
Yes. Peugeot won Le Mans three times — in 1992, 1993 and 2009. The 2009 victory with the 908 HDi FAP diesel defeated Audi's dominant programme in one of the most celebrated Le Mans battles ever.
Veera K — Founder & Editor, Rev N Rise
Author Veera K Founder & Editor — Rev N Rise

I started Rev N Rise because I wanted a place where car coverage felt real — honest, enthusiastic and written by someone who genuinely loves the automotive world.

I've been obsessed with cars for as long as I can remember. From tracking every new launch to breaking down which car gives you the best value — this is what I do, and I genuinely love it.

Thanks for reading. Let's talk cars.

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