Mitsubishi Australia took a bold step by pushing the once-affordable ASX upmarket with last year’s launch of a new-generation model, and it has now admitted that its European-sourced small SUV isn’t meeting sales targets.

The Japanese brand launched the second-generation ASX in Australia in late 2025, rolling out a small SUV that’s little more than a rebadged version of the Renault Captur. Its Australian launch came two years after its European debut in mid-2023.

The European shift from the first-generation, Mitsubishi Lancer-based ASX naturally brought a substantial price rise, with the base price climbing by $13,300. That has resulted in a drastic sales drop, with sales in the first four months of 2026 down 88.6 per cent on the same period in 2025.

Now, Mitsubishi Australia says it’s working on ways to increase the SUV’s sales, but those efforts have hampered plans to introduce a more diverse ASX range that could include hybrid options sold overseas.

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“We’ve really struggled to realise the volume aspirations we were hoping for,” Mitsubishi Australia product strategy general manager Bruce Hampel told CarExpert.

“It’s arguably a very good vehicle, but it’s just not reaching the right buyer types at this point in time.”

When asked whether there were concrete plans to introduce hybrid versions of the current ASX to Australia, which are currently sold in Europe, Mr Hampel said “not at this stage”.

“The majority of customers are still buying ICE [vehicles], it’s an option for us in future model years that has been a little bit stalled with the uptake of the current ASX in the market,” he said.

In a bid to generate more interest in the ASX, Mitsubishi launched an end-of-financial-year (EOFY) drive-away pricing offer for the SUV’s base ‘LS’ trim. Typically priced at $37,740 before on-road costs, the deal brings its cost down to $34,990 drive-away until May 31, 2026.