GM just released the first official images of the refreshed 2024 Buick Envision, showing off the exterior and interior of the updated compact crossover. The 2024 Buick Envision arrives as the fourth model year for the nameplate’s second generation. Notably, the 2024 Buick Envision will offer the GM Super Cruise system.
GM Authority has covered the refreshed 2024 Buick Envision since October of 2022.
The new images include a front three-quarters view of the refreshed exterior, showing the new front fascia, new grille, and the profile, including a set of multi-spoke alloy wheels. The new design takes inspiration from the Buick Wildcat EV that debuted last year, and includes Buick’s new Tri-Shield logo mounted front and center on the refreshed hood design.
GM also released an image of the new interior, showing off a three-spoke, multi-function steering wheel, a fully digital display that stretches across the dash, and elegant trim and materials for the door cards.
Notably, the new interior image shows a passenger in the driver’s seat with their hands off the steering wheel and the GM Super Cruise system activated. GM has confirmed that the refreshed 2024 Buick Envision will be the first Buick model in North America to offer the GM Super Cruise system, with users able to activate the system on more than 400,000 miles of roads throughout the U.S. and Canada.
Further details on the refreshed 2024 Buick Envision will be released later this year. Production will kick off late in October, per a GM Authority exclusive.
Buick is planning to debut five new models through the 2024 calendar year, with the refreshed 2024 Buick Envision arriving as the third model of the five. Buick is the fastest-growing mainstream brand in the U.S., with sales increasing 76.4 percent through May of 2023.
“The current Envision is delivering record retail sales over the first half of 2023 and is on track to have its best sales year ever,” GM reports. “The updated 2024 model is set to further boost Buick’s portfolio, which is quickly becoming one of the freshest vehicle lineups in the industry.”
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Comments
Made in China – a country committed to stealing our intellectual property, threatening its neighbors and the destruction of the US. Like buying from the devil.
Understand completely what you say about China and I agree. They are not our friends and will never be. But let’s be honest..your home as well as mine is full of Chinese made $hit. What’s the difference of buying a $45k suv when over a lifetime you probably spend far more on smaller $hitty electronics (some containing recording devices and data collectors) and other imported items from China? And same with you idiots whining about China while using your precious overpriced Chinese made iPhone to complain on this forum.
Samsung Android phones are made in South Korea – an ally.
Actually 10% of Samsung phones are made in South Korea the majority of them are made in Vietnam a communist country. But they hate China like us so that’s cool right?
Not to mention where do you think those Samsung internal components come from? Wink wink China. 🤡
“The current Envision is delivering record retail sales over the first half of 2023 and is on track to have its best sales year ever,” GM reports.
It is simply astonishing that people will so freely buy a vehicle imported from China. It doesn’t matter that it is highly rated for initial quality…it was made in ,and imported from, CHINA. It has 90% Chinese sourced content, and only 6% Canadian/US content. When someone buys one of these, they are supporting the Chinese economy and the workers that built the car. Those workers then spend their earnings in their country. GM Corporate in the US sees very little revenue/profit from the sale of these vehicles in the United States, and the US economy benefits very little if at all from these.
The sage philosopher Ron White said “ you can’t fix stupid “. The dumbing down of the U. S. continues at break neck speed.
But it’s more important to talk and then make laws against abortion, LGBTBBQ, remove curriculums in schools, than to do something about these companies that shift their labor production to Asia for the past 40 years.
But lets continue to deflect on the USA’s real problems.
that interior gives me hope unlike the other recent garbage interiors other buick models have
When the current Envision launched, it really caught my eye, and apparently the eye of many others as I have seen many of them around. It is a good looking small SUV and Buick should have pushed that design forward through the rest of their lineup.
Instead after finally offering something that attracts not only the older well-to-do crowd and also attracted new younger affluent types…they dump that for their new design language which will not do as well. Good luck Buick.
The friend goes from being recognizable as a Buick to just another anonymous car.
The design is fine. They just need to build it in USA, Canada, South Korea, or Mexico. Not China.
maybe this model will come with all the parts and components….Buick lost me as a customer when the dealers wouldn’t order a Envision and have it come in complete….bought a Volvo instead….
You never see any Buick dealers, I live in a 3 million population area and not one Buick GMC dealer.
Strange, I live in a metro area with only about 1 million people and we have 5 Buick dealerships.
This was one of GM’s best looking vehicles.
Was.
The new Buick beak ruins this car
What a shame.
Rather manufacture it in Mexico or Korea. I don’t want this garbage produced in China
I’m with you all about not being happy with this made in China. But it was the #2 seller in the category recently. So aside from the GM fan base on these forums, what does that say about the general consumer buying these? Do they not know or do they not care? Or is the (previous) design and complete package offered by GM that compelling that none of it matters?
I could not buy a vehicle made in China because, for decades, I argued with people about buying Japanese cars, our enemy that bombed Pearl Harbor and tortured our soldiers at the march of Bataan. Even when they build them in the USA the profits go back to Japan They didn’t come here as a favor to the USA they came for our money.
Fully understand your feelings, however – with that way of thinking, I can’t listen to old Beatles songs because the British fought us in the revolution and burned down the White House in 1812. Can no longer wear Italian loafers because, you know, that Mussolini thing – not to mention what their ancestors, the Romans, did to my Christian ancestors. And my Krups coffeemaker has to go because they built armaments for the Nazis . . .
I’m not trying to be a smart a$$ here, but you get my drift. The world has changed, and multinational corporations like GM are ultimately beholden to their stockholders first, not to the countries where they operate. As consumers we all have the choice on what we choose to buy. We all vote with our wallets every day.
While I am also not happy about it being made in China, to me the much bigger problem is it will now look like every other small SUV. At any distance, I doubt anyone will be able to tell that they are looking at a Buick, especially from the front, which to me is super generic and looks like an Escape. What a shame.
BTW, where is the picture gallery? When I click on it, it is not available?
Other than the emblem, what styling cues indicate this is a Buick? Do these manufacturers have a ‘style guide’ for their products? They need to try harder, IMO.
The front grill on the 2023 envision with the chrome strip going across the grill is better looking than the 2024 envision without the chrome strip.
Why can’t the designers see this.
This grill is a tamed down version of the Buick Wildcat EV grille and is the future of Buick. It looks great. Would you like them to bring back the thick chrome bars of the Buicks from the 40’s and 50’s?
Every time I hit the like button the counter resets to zero.
I’m not speaking about the grill from the 40s And 50s.Please reply to what I said.
this is what I said:that the grill on the 2023 Buick Envision with the chrome going across the grill looks better than the grill on
2024 Envision that do not have the chrome strip.
Hear you, Michael D. Isn’t it amazing how an additional say, $100.00 spend for a few strips of chrome on a vehicle by the manufacturer returns a much more upmarket look for a vehicle? ( and they can charge more! ) Buicks are supposed to be “Premium” and yet they mostly look decontented. I understand modern design trends – but Buicks could benefit from a little more sparkle and trim. When a Hyundai or a Kia looks more “Premium” than a Buick to the average consumer then GM has a competitive problem. All of GM’s Buick concept cars are detailed and trimmed to the max – yet their production cars remind me of aunt Martha’s 1975 Biscayne with dog dish hub caps and an interior with the ambiance of a taxicab. Bob Lutz fought this battle a few years back. Looks like the bean counters are back in control once again. No-one ever cost cuts their way to market share. Too bad.
Buick is sad these days, nothing but Chinese and Korean junk.
That is good news that you can get the same chrome strip that is going across the grill on the 2023 Envision put on the
2024 Envision.
Michael.
The goal of most contemporaneous car makers is to build a quality product. In the past, we have heard so much about “German engineering.” Well, look how poorly Mercedes-Benz products are in the J.D. Power rankings.
Yet, Buicks are some of the best built automobiles in the world, being built in regions many of us consider hostile to American interests. There must BE a reason why the Envision continues to be built in China, and perhaps it is quality of the build? Our family owns a ’23 Avenir Envision…and it’s a remarkably well put together automobile. Tight, pieces fit well, plus finish out and inside is excellent…everything Buicks are supposed to be.
There is a corporate reason for everything….like well made, tough and sturdy Apple phones, the Buick Envision is another example of Chinese workmanship. We may disagree with the Chinese on their governmental policies, but as a population, their workforce knows how to make excellent products.
Around the time GM faced bankruptcy (2009), they were in a corporate wide mission to improve quality by hiring some top engineers from Toyota to come to the US and demonstrate how a carmaker can, year after year, build quality. Perhaps that needs to happen again and foster the migration of Buick production back to the US.
I don’t doubt it’s a quality product. It’s not the Chinese people – we can all learn to get along. It’s their autocratic government threatening its neighbors, endorsing IP theft and committed to the downfall of the west.