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| Vauxhall Belmont | |
|---|---|
| Overview | |
| Manufacturer | Vauxhall (General Motors) |
| Production | January 1986 – September 1991 |
| Body and chassis | |
| Class | Small family car |
| Body style | 4-doorsaloon |
| Related | Vauxhall Astra Opel Kadett E Daewoo Nexia |
| Chronology | |
| Predecessor | Vauxhall Astra (saloon) (1980–1984) |
| Successor | Vauxhall Astra (saloon) (1991) |

The Vauxhall Belmont is asaloon car sold inGreat Britain byVauxhall between January 1986 and September 1991. It is a rebadged version of theOpel Kadett E saloon, with this bodystyle launched in September 1985. The other body styles of the Kadett E were marketed in the United Kingdom asVauxhall Astra. The Belmont won praise for its hugeboot compared to other rivals of the time.
With hatchbacks becoming firmly established as the preferred bodystyle in small European family cars, fewer saloons were on offer. During the 1980s, in order to enable them to position saloons as a slight cut above their hatchback counterparts, many manufacturers marketed them with different nameplates.[1]
Ford of Europe's saloon version of theFord Escort hatchback was badged theFord Orion, and theVolkswagen Golf based saloon was sold as theVolkswagen Jetta.
However, when GM launched a saloon version of theVauxhall Astra/Opel Kadett, only British customers received it with a different badge. The Belmont went on sale in January 1986. While sold as a Kadett in the rest of Europe, inSouth Africa, it was called the Opel Monza (not to be confused with the largeSenator based coupé sold in Europe) along with a convertible.[2] This replaced theOpel Ascona.[3]
When the Astra II was replaced in September 1991, the Belmont nameplate was shelved, the car never having never lived up to Vauxhall's claim that it was "not just a booted Astra".
In December 2004, it was revealed that the Belmont wasthe most stolen car in the United Kingdom in terms of ratio stolen, with 1,978 vehicles stolen in 2003, which amounted to around 1 out of every 10 Belmonts registered. At this time, an estimated 20,000 Belmonts remained on the road. The car also topped a similar list for 2005, this list being published in December 2006.[4][5]
As of 2019, according to records by theDVLA, only twenty three Belmonts remain on the roads, with a further sixty nine onSORN.[6] This has made it a very rare car on British roads.
Vauxhall deleted the Belmont nametag with the launch of the Mark 3 Astra in September 1991, and the Astra nameplate was used on all body styles. For later variant of the Astra, see theOpel Astra. Sales of the Astra badged saloon were not as strong as those achieved by the Belmont, as saloons of this size continued to fall in popularity throughout the 1990s.
Later Astra saloons were also sold as an Opel, unlike the Belmont, which in theUnited Kingdom was only sold as a Vauxhall. The saloon version was dropped altogether in March 2004, upon the launch of the MK V Astra, although right hand drive saloons with Opel badges have continued to be sold in Ireland.