# Opel Agila

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Not to be confused with [Chevrolet Agile](/source/Chevrolet_Agile).

Motor vehicle

Opel Agila Overview Manufacturer Suzuki Also called Vauxhall Agila Suzuki Wagon R-Wide (2000–2007) Suzuki Splash (2007–2014) Production 2000–2014 Body and chassis Class City car (A) Layout Front-engine, front-wheel-drive Chronology Successor Opel Karl/Vauxhall Viva Opel Adam

The **Opel Agila** (from [Lat.](/source/Latin) *agilis*, "agile") is a [city car](/source/City_car) marketed under the German marque [Opel](/source/Opel) from 2000 to 2014, as a [rebadged](/source/Badge-engineering) variant of the [Suzuki Wagon R+](/source/Suzuki_Wagon_R%2B) (first generation) and the [Suzuki Splash](/source/Suzuki_Splash) (second generation). It has been marketed under the [Vauxhall](/source/Vauxhall_Motors) marque in the United Kingdom.

Its first generation was classified as a [city car](/source/City_car), whereas the second generation is a [mini MPV](/source/Mini_MPV), and the car was replaced in March 2015 by the [Opel Karl](/source/Opel_Karl), which is known as the Vauxhall Viva in the United Kingdom.

## First generation (H00; 2000)

Motor vehicle

Agila A Overview Also called Suzuki Wagon R+ Vauxhall Agila Suzuki Wagon Solio (Japan) Chevrolet MW (Japan) Production 2000–2007 Assembly Poland: Gliwice (Opel Polska)[1] Designer Hideo Kodama Body and chassis Body style 5-door hatchback Powertrain Engine Petrol: 973 cc Z10XE I3 998 cc Z10XEP TwinPort I3 1199 cc Z12XE I4 1229 cc Z12XEP TwinPort I4 Diesel: 1248 cc Z13DT I4 Transmission 5-speed manual Dimensions Wheelbase 2,360 mm (92.9 in) Length 3,535 mm (139.2 in) Width 1,620 mm (63.8 in) Height 1,660 mm (65.4 in) Curb weight 993 kg (2,189 lb)

The first generation Agila is a [rebadged](/source/Badge_engineering) version of the [Suzuki Wagon R+](/source/Suzuki_Solio), which was produced in Japan, and later given the "Solio" surname. The Agila's Opel sourced 1.0 and 1.2 litre [petrol engines](/source/Petrol_engine) were smaller than the 1.3 litre found in the European market Wagon R+. The cam-chain Opel engines, as used in the Corsa, proved less reliable than the cambelt driven Suzuki unit.[2] Sales began in August 2000.

The 1.0 engine was the Z10XE engine with three cylinders in line and 973 cc. The 1.2 engine was the Z12XE with four cylinders in line and 1199 cc. The Agila was built at Opel's factory in [Gliwice](/source/Gliwice), Poland. The Suzuki Wagon R+ for the European market was built at the [Magyar Suzuki](/source/Magyar_Suzuki) plant in [Esztergom](/source/Esztergom), Hungary. The facelift was launched in August 2003. This was also when the 1.25-liter diesel option was introduced. The petrol engines were also updated and now featured Opel's [TwinPort](/source/TwinPort) technology as well as marginal displacement increases, although the updated 1.2-liter four-cylinder option did not arrive until January 2004.

		- Opel Agila pre-facelift

		- Rear view

		- In the United Kingdom, the Agila was badged as a Vauxhall

		- Opel Agila facelift

		- Vauxhall Agila facelift

## Second generation (H08; 2007)

Motor vehicle

Agila B Overview Also called Suzuki Splash Vauxhall Agila Maruti Ritz (India) Changhe Spla (China and South America) Production 2007–2014 Assembly Hungary: Esztergom (Magyar Suzuki) Body and chassis Body style 5-door hatchback Related Suzuki Swift (RS) Powertrain Engine Petrol: 1.0 L I3 1.2 L I4 Diesel: 1.3 L Multijet/SDE I4 Transmission 5-speed manual 4-speed automatic Dimensions Wheelbase 2,360 mm (92.9 in) Length 3,740 mm (147.2 in) Width 1,680 mm (66.1 in) Height 1,590 mm (62.6 in)

Rear view

Vauxhall Agila

The second generation Agila was officially announced on 15 May 2007, and was presented at the [2007 Frankfurt Motor Show](/source/International_Motor_Show_Germany#2007),[3] as a rebadged variant of the [Suzuki Splash](/source/Suzuki_Splash).

The car was 200 mm (7.9 in) longer than its predecessor — similar to [superminis](/source/Supermini) and [mini MPVs](/source/Mini_MPV) such as the [Citroën C3 Picasso](/source/Citro%C3%ABn_C3_Picasso), [Toyota Yaris](/source/Toyota_Yaris), [Honda Jazz](/source/Honda_Fit) and [Nissan Micra](/source/Nissan_Micra). It was slightly larger in size than the previous generation, and was classified as a [mini MPV](/source/Mini_MPV). Sales began in April 2008.

Petrol engines were a three-cylinder 1.0 litre, 65 [PS](/source/Metric_horsepower) (48 [kW](/source/Kilowatt); 64 [bhp](/source/Horsepower#Brake_horsepower)) and a four-cylinder 1.2 litre 86 PS (63 kW; 85 bhp), and the diesel unit a four-cylinder 1.3 litre [CDTi](/source/Multijet) 75 PS (55 kW; 74 bhp) with [common rail](/source/Common_rail) technology. The Agila came in two different trim levels: Base/Essentia and Edition/Enjoy.

European production of the Opel Agila and Suzuki Splash took place at the [Magyar Suzuki](/source/Magyar_Suzuki) plant in [Esztergom](/source/Esztergom), Hungary.[4] The car was replaced in March 2015 by the [Opel Karl](/source/Opel_Karl), known as the Vauxhall Viva in the United Kingdom.

### Engines

All engines contain the '[Ecotec](/source/Ecotec)' technology.

Petrol engine Model Engine Displacement Power Torque Note CO2 emission (g/km) 1.0 ecoFLEX I3 973 cc 65 PS (48 kW; 64 hp) at 6,000 rpm 90 N⋅m (66 lb⋅ft) at 4,800 rpm 120 (2008–10) 119 (2010-) 1.2 VVT I4 1199 cc 86 PS (63 kW; 85 hp) at 5,500 rpm 114 N⋅m (84 lb⋅ft) at 4,400 rpm 131 (2008–10) 119 (2010-) Diesel engine Model Engine Displacement Power Torque Note CO2 emission (g/km) 1.3 CDTI I4 1248 cc 70 PS (51 kW; 69 hp) at 4,000 rpm 170 N⋅m (130 lb⋅ft) at 1,750 rpm (2008–10) 120

## References

1. **[^](#cite_ref-1)** ["Opel. Opel In Poland"](https://web.archive.org/web/20120320111734/http://car-cat.com/firm-883.html). Car-cat.com. Archived from the original on 20 March 2012. Retrieved 19 July 2010.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-2)** ["Suzuki Wagon R+ 2000 - Car Review - Good & Bad | Honest John"](https://web.archive.org/web/20191203150929/https://www.honestjohn.co.uk/carbycar/suzuki/wagon-rplus-2000/good/). *www.honestjohn.co.uk*. Archived from [the original](https://www.honestjohn.co.uk/carbycar/suzuki/wagon-rplus-2000/good/) on 3 December 2019.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-3)** ["BROKEN LINK The New Vauxhall Agila – Flex in the city!"](http://media.gm.com/media/gb/en/vauxhall/vehicles/agila/2009.html). Vauxhall. Retrieved 1 February 2012.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-4)** ["Suzuki Splash, the shortened Swift MPV"](http://www.autopressnews.com/2007/m07/Suzuki/suzuki_splash_opel_agila_minicar.shtml). Autopress News. 10 July 2007. Retrieved 10 August 2013.

## External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to [Opel Agila](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Opel_Agila).

- [Vauxhall Agila page](http://www.vauxhall.co.uk/vehicles/vauxhall-range/cars/agila/overview.html)

v t e Opel A marque of Stellantis Vehicles Quadricycles Rocks Electric Cars Astra Corsa Crossovers/SUVs Frontera (2024) Grandland Mokka Vans Combo Movano Vivaro/Zafira Life Discontinued models Adam (2012–2019) Admiral (1937–1939, 1964–1977) Agila (2000–2014) Antara (2006–2015) Ampera (2011–2015) Ampera-e (2017–2019) Arena (1997–2001) Ascona (1970–1988) Astravan (1981–2012) Blazer (1995–2002) Bedford Blitz (1973–1986) Blitz (1930–1975) Calibra (1989–1997) Campo (1992–2001) Cascada (2013–2019) Chevette (1980–1982) Commodore (1967–1982) Corsavan (1983–2018) Crossland (2017–2024) Diplomat (1964–1977) 5/12 PS "Puppchen" (1911–1920) 4/8 PS "Doktorwagen" (1909–1910) Frontera (1991–2004) GT (1968–1973, 2006–2009) Insignia (2008–2022) Kadett (1937–1940, 1962–1991) Kapitän (1939–1970) Karl (2014–2019) 4 PS “Laubfrosch” (1924–1931) Manta (1970–1988) Meriva (2003–2017) Monterey (1992–1999) Movano A/B (1998–2021) Monza (1978–1986) Olympia (1935–1940, 1947–1953, 1967–1970) Olympia Rekord (1953–1957) Omega (1986–2003) Patent Motor Car, System Lutzmann (1899–1902) P4 (1935–1937) RAK (1928) RAK2 (1928) Regent (1928–1929) Rekord (1953–1986) Senator (1978–1993) Signum (2003–2008) Sintra (1996–1999) Speedster (2000–2005) Super 6 (1937–1938) Tigra (1994–2001, 2004–2009) 10/30 (10/35) PS (1922–1924) Vectra (1988–2008) Vivaro (2001–2018) Zafira/Zafira Tourer (1999–2019) Concept cars Flextreme Flextreme GT/E Frogster GTC Concept HydroGen3 HydroGen4 Insignia Concept Maxx Meriva Concept Monza Concept Omega V8 Omega V8.com Signum2 Concept Junior RAK e Slalom Tech 1 Trixx Twin Manta GSe ElektroMOD Divisions and subsidiaries Vauxhall VXR Opel Performance Center People Adam Opel (founder) Fritz von Opel Rikky von Opel Wilhelm von Opel Facilities Aspern Brandenburg Ellesmere Port Eisenach Gliwice Luton Szentgotthárd Tychy Zaragoza Other Vauxhall Motors GM platforms GM engines PSA engines GM transmissions Intellilink Irmscher RAK1 Steinmetz Opel Tuning Opel Rally Team Category Commons

v t e « previous — Opel car timeline, 1980–present Ownership General Motors PSA Group Stellantis Class 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 Quadricycle Rocks-e City car Agila A Agila B Karl Adam Supermini Corsa A Corsa B Corsa C Corsa D Corsa E Corsa F Chevette Ampera-e Small family car Ampera Kadett D Kadett E / Belmont Astra F Astra G Astra H Astra J Astra K Astra L Large family car Ascona B Ascona C Vectra A Vectra B Vectra C / Signum Insignia A Insignia B Executive car Rekord E / Commodore C Omega A Omega B Luxury car Senator A Senator B Coupé Tigra A Manta B Calibra Monza Convertible Tigra TwinTop B Cascada Roadster Speedster GT (Roadster) Mini MPV Meriva A Compact MPV Meriva B Zafira A Zafira B Large MPV Sintra Zafira Tourer C Mini SUV Mokka A Mokka B Crossland Frontera Compact SUV Frontera A Frontera B Antara Grandland A Grandland B Mid-size SUV Monterey Pickup Campo/Brava Panel van / LAV Kadett Combo A Combo B Combo C Combo D Combo E LCV Bedford Blitz Arena Vivaro A Vivaro B Vivaro C Movano A Movano B Movano C Legend/Notes PSA/Stellantis platform GM platform Sourced from Lotus Sourced from Fiat Sourced from Renault Sourced from Suzuki Sourced from Isuzu

v t e Vauxhall Motors A marque of Stellantis Vehicles Cars Astra Corsa Crossovers/SUVs Frontera Grandland Mokka Vans Combo Movano Vivaro Historic and discontinued models 10–4 (1937–1947) 12 (1937–1946) 14–6 (1939–1948) 14 And 14/40 (1922–1927) 20/60 (1927–1930) 23/60 (1922–1926) 25 (1937–1940) 25/70 (1926–1928) 30-98 (1913–1922) A Type (1911–1914) B Type (1911–1914) C Type (1911–1913) D Type (1912–1922) Adam (2012–2019) Agila (2000–2014) Ampera (2012–2015) Antara (2006–2015) Arena (1997–2001) Astramax (1986–1993) Astravan (1992–2013) Belmont (1986–1991) Brava (1990–1998) Calibra (1989–1997) Carlton (1978–1994) Cascada (2013–2019) Cavalier (1975–1995) Chevette (1975–1984) Corsavan (1994–2018) Cresta (1954–1972) Firenza (1970–1975) Frontera (1991–2004) Insignia (2008–2022) Magnum (1973–1978) Meriva (2003–2017) Midi (1990–1994) Monaro (2004–2006) Monterey (1994–1998) Movano (1980–2021) Nova (1983–1993) Omega (1994–2003) Rascal (1990–1993) Royale (1978–1983) Senator (1983–1994) Signum (2003–2008) Sintra (1997–1999) Tigra (1994–2001, 2004–2009) Vectra (1995–2009) Velox (1948–1965) Ventora (1968–1976) Viceroy (1978–1982) Victor (1957–1978) Viscount (1966–1972) Viva (1963–1979, 2015–2019) Vivaro (2001–2018) VXR8 (2009–2017) VX220 (2000–2005) VX4/90 (1961–1972) Wyvern (1948–1957) Zafira (1999–2018) Divisions and subsidiaries Bedford VXR People Duncan Aldred Wayne Cherry Gerry Marshall Laurence Pomeroy Factories Dunstable Ellesmere Port Luton Other GM Platforms GM Engines PSA Engines GM Transmissions Proving Grounds Dealer Team Vauxhall Intellilink Irmscher Opel Slant Four Vauxhall Motors F.C. Category Commons

v t e « previous - Vauxhall car timeline, 1980–present Ownership General Motors PSA Group Stellantis Size Body 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 City car Hatchback Agila A Agila B Viva Adam Supermini Hatchback Chevette Nova Corsa B Corsa C Corsa D Corsa E Corsa F Saloon Chevette Nova Saloon Estate Chevette Van Chevette Nova Van Corsa Van Corsa Van Corsa Van Convertible Tigra Tigra TwinTop Small family car Hatch Astra D Astra E Astra F Astra G Astra H Astra J Astra K Astra L Astra GTC Ampera Saloon Astra D Belmont Astra F Astra G Estate Astra Caravan Astra E Astra F Astra G Astra H Sports Tourer Astra K Astra L Van Bedford Astra Bedford Astravan Astra F Astravan Astravan Convertible Astra Convertible Astra Convertible Astra Convertible Astra TwinTop Cascada Coupé Astra Coupé Large family car Hatchback Cavalier Cavalier Cavalier Vectra Vectra Insignia Insignia Grand Sport → Insignia Signum Saloon Cavalier I Cavalier II Cavalier III Vectra B Vectra C Insignia A Estate Cavalier II Vectra B Vectra C Insignia Sports Tourer Insignia Sports Tourer Insignia Country Tourer Insignia Country Tourer Coupé Cavalier I Calibra Monaro Convertible Cavalier II Executive car Saloon Royale Senator A Senator B Omega B VXR8 Carlton I Carlton II Viceroy Estate Carlton I Carlton II Omega B Coupé Royale Coupé Roadster VX220 Mini MPV Meriva A Meriva B Compact MPV Zafira A Zafira B → Zafira Family B Combo Life Large MPV Sintra Zafira Tourer C Vivaro Life Subcompact crossover SUV Mokka → Mokka X Mokka Crossland X → Crossland Frontera Compact crossover SUV Frontera A Frontera B Antara Grandland X → Grandland Grandland Full-size SUV Monterey Pickup Bedford KB Bedford Brava → Brava LCV Small Bedford Astramax → Astramax Combo B Combo C Combo D Combo E Medium Bedford Blitz Arena Vivaro A Vivaro B Vivaro C Large Movano A Movano B Movano C Legend/Notes PSA platform Sourced from Suzuki Sourced from Fiat Sourced from Renault Sourced from Isuzu

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [Opel Agila](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opel_Agila) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opel_Agila?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
