Official production of the Alfa Romeo Junior began on September 30, 2024, at the Tychy manufacturing facility
in Poland. This high-tech plant is also responsible for the assembly lines of the Jeep Avenger and the Fiat
600.
The vehicle's commercial performance played a central role in Alfa Romeo's financial recovery between 2024
and 2026. In the consolidated year of 2025, the brand recorded a significant growth of 20.1% in global
sales, surpassing 73,000 delivered units, a level directly sustained by the success of Junior orders. The
compact utility accumulated more than 60,000 purchase orders across 41 global markets during the launch
period. The model quickly positioned itself at the top of premium B-SUV sales in highly representative
countries like Italy, France, Austria, Greece, and Slovakia.
Table 3: Market Performance and Sales Distribution (Consolidated 2025)
| Business and Sales Indicator |
Commercial Performance Data |
| Total Alfa Romeo Sales Volume |
Over 73,000 global units |
| Junior Order Book |
Over 60,000 bookings in 41 countries |
| Share of the Ibrida Version (MHEV) |
~70% of the total order mix |
| Share of the Elettrica Version (Base) |
~25% of the total order mix |
| Share of the Elettrica Veloce Version |
~5% of the total order mix |
| Pure Battery Electric Model Penetration Rate |
17% of total Junior sales volume |
| Registration Growth in Europe |
+31.1% driven by entry-level range |
| Fastest-Growing Markets (YoY) |
United Kingdom (+80.1%), France (+41.9%), Italy (+20.7%) |
Despite strong commercial indicators in Europe and Asia, Alfa Romeo did not introduce the Junior into the
North American market, focusing its efforts instead on volume markets like Mexico, where the model debuted
in early 2026 exclusively in the 145 hp Ibrida variant. This absence from the US market occurred in parallel
with a severe 36.2% drop in the brand's US sales during 2025, where combined deliveries of the Tonale,
Stelvio, and Giulia totaled just 5,652 units.
Industrial dynamics in Poland also went through periods of instability. In late 2025, facing a weakened
European market and a general slowdown in battery-electric purchases, Stellantis decreed scheduled technical
shutdowns in Tychy. Production of the Alfa Romeo Junior and its sister models was halted for nine days as a
measure to adjust and control dealership inventories, demonstrating the operational challenges stemming from
European economic volatility.