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Renault

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Renault S.A.
Company typePublic (Société Anonyme)
Euronext Paris: RNO
CAC 40 Component
ISINFR0000131906 Edit this on Wikidata
IndustryAutomotive
Founded25 February 1899; 127 years ago (1899-02-25)
Founders
Headquarters,
France
Area served
Worldwide; 128 countries[1]
Key people
Products
Production output
Decrease 2,524,234[4] (2021)
RevenueIncrease 46.21 billion[4] (2021)
Increase 1.40 billion[4] (2021)
Increase 0.97 billion[4] (2021)
Total assetsDecrease €113.74 billion[4] (2021)
Total equityIncrease €27.89 billion[4] (2021)
Owners
Number of employees
170,158 (Q4 2020)[6]
Subsidiaries
List
Websiterenaultgroup.com
Renault
OwnerRenault S.A.
CountryFrance
IntroducedDecember 1898
WebsiteOfficial website

Renault S.A. is a French vehicle manufacturer producing cars, vans, buses, tractors, and trucks, and, in the past, autorail vehicles. Its alliance with Nissan makes it the world's ninth largest vehicle maker.[7] Headquartered in Boulogne-Billancourt, Renault owns the Romanian Automobile Dacia and the Korean Renault Samsung Motors. The company's most successful cars to date are the Renault Clio and the Renault Laguna, and its core market is Europe.[7] The company is known for numerous revolutionary designs, security technologies and motor racing. 1899

Current models (as of 2026)

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Dacia vehicles, sold in some markets under the Renault marque:

Renault Samsung vehicles, sold in some markets under the Renault marque:

  • Koleos (Renault Samsung QM5/Renault Samsung QM6)
  • Arkana (Renault Samsung XM3)

Renault light commercial vehicles:

Dacia light commercial vehicles, sold in some markets under the Renault marque:


Former models

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Pre–World War I To World War I (1899–1918)

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  • Voiturette (Type A/Type B/Type C/Type D/Type E/Type G/Type H/Type J) (1899–1903)
  • 8CV (Type L/Type M/Type Z/Type AJ/Type AL/Type AN/Type AX) (1902–1914)
    • 7CV (Type R/Type T) (1903–1904)
    • 14CV (Type N (a)/Type N (b)/Type U (b)/Type U (c)/Type U (d)/Type X/Type AB/Type BX/Type CC/Type DJ) (1903–1914)
      • 10CV (Type N (c)/Type Q/Type U (a)/Type U (e)/Type Y/Type AH/Type AM/Type BK/Type GS/Type IC/Type IG/Type II/Type IM/Type JR) (1903–1923) (Was facelifted as the Renault KZ in 1923)
      • 20CV (Type S/Type V/Type AS/Type BY/Type BM/Type CE/Type CH/Type DX/Type EI/Type EJ) (1903–1919)
        • 18CV (Type BF/Type CD/Type ED/Type FE/Type FS/Type GR/Type GV/Type HG/Type IQ/Type JS/Type JY/Type KD/Type MG/Type PI/Type PZ) (1909–1928)
          • 22CV (Type DO/Type DP/Type EE) (1913–1914)
    • Taxi de la Marne (Type AG/Type AG–1) (1905–1921)
    • 9CV (Type EK/Type FD) (1913–1920)
  • 35CV (Type AI/Type AO/Type CF/Type CI/Type DQ/Type ET) (1906–1917)
  • 40CV (Type AR/Type BH/Type CG/Type DT/Type ES/Type HD/Type IR/Type JP/Type IR1/Type IR2/Type JD/Type JV/Type JV1/Type MC/Type MC1/Type NM) (1908–1928)
  • 12CV (Type AZ/Type BZ/Type CB/Type DG/Type EF/Type EU/Type JM/Type JT/Type KH/Type LS/Type ME) (1909–1926)
  • 11CV (Type CQ/Type DM/Type ER/Type FK) (1912–1919)
  • EG (1914–1919)

Between the wars (1919–1939)

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  • AHx (1941–1947)

After World War II to 1970 (1945–1970)

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Renault 4CV Belgium AA

Numeric models (1961–1996)

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  • 3 (1961–1962)
  • 8 (1962–1973)
    • 10 (1965–1971)
  • 16 (1965–1980)
  • 6 (1968–1980)
  • 12 (1969–1980)
  • 15 (1971–1979)
    • 17 (1971–1979)
  • 5 (aka "Le Car")(1972–1996)
    • 7 (Spain only) (1974–1984)
  • 30 (1975–1983)
    • 20 (1975–1984)
  • 14 (1976–1983)
  • 18 (1978–1986)
  • 9 (1981–1989)
    • 11 (1983–1989)
  • 25 (1984–1992)
  • 21 (1986–1995)
  • 19 (1988–1996)

Former vehicles in production

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References

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  1. "Our plants, labs, design and engineering center - Renault Group". renaultgroup.com.
  2. "Renault chairman: Could seek 4-5 billion euros worth of bank loans". Reuters. 10 April 2020.
  3. "French carmaker Renault names Luca de Meo as new CEO". Reuters. 28 January 2020.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Earnings report 2021" (PDF). Renault Group. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 February 2022. Retrieved 17 March 2022.
  5. "Key figures". Groupe Renault. Retrieved 29 September 2023.
  6. "Facts and figures 2020" (PDF). Renault. pp. 6, 7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 May 2021. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  7. 1 2 Renault
  8. "Renault Cars". Renault.com. Retrieved 3 January 2012.
  9. "Dacia Car Range - Choose from our model range - Dacia UK". dacia.co.uk.
  10. "Dacia Duster commercial". dacia.co.uk.