Car launches tend to follow a predictable formula: reveal the whole vehicle, publish the specifications, talk performance. Rinse, repeat.
Citroën is taking a different approach with its All-New Basalt SUV Coupé, due in South Africa at the end of March 2026. Instead of unveiling the full car, the brand is introducing it in fragments.
Close-up visuals of lighting signatures, alloy wheels and interior finishes are being released like a curated collection, each image carrying the line: “You’ll want a piece of it.” Shot more like fashion editorials than automotive renders, the campaign isolates details before revealing the whole.
It’s an unusual move in the B-segment, where most B-SUVs compete on price, fuel economy and monthly repayments. Design is often secondary to practicality. Here, design leads.
The Basalt sits between hatchback and SUV, pairing raised ride height and usable cabin space with a tapering coupé-style roofline and a slightly wider, more assertive stance. The fundamentals remain practical; the presentation is more deliberate.
There’s a broader shift at play, too. As vehicles become more digitally integrated and experience-driven, buyers increasingly evaluate them the way they do other consumer products – through usability, aesthetics and how they fit into daily life.
Full specifications and pricing will follow closer to launch. For now, Citroën is betting that familiarity with the details will make the eventual reveal feel less like a surprise and more like a recognition moment.
In a category not known for drama, that’s a quietly confident play.
Citroën Basalt – You’ll want a piece of it





