Austin 7
The Austin 7 is an economy car that was produced from 1922 until 1939 in the United Kingdom by Austin. It was nicknamed the "Baby Austin" and was at that time one of the most popular cars produced for the British market and sold well abroad. Its effect on the British market was similar to that of the Model T Ford in the US, replacing most other British economy cars and cyclecars of the early 1920s. It was also licensed and copied by companies all over the world. The first BMW car, the BMW Dixi, was a licensed Austin 7. In France they were made and sold as Rosengarts, and in the United States they were built by the American Austin Car Company. In Japan, Nissan also used the 7 design as the basis for their first cars, although not under licence. This eventually led to a 1952 agreement for Nissan to build and sell Austins in Japan under the Austin name.
Text adapted from “Austin 7” on Wikipedia ↗ · CC BY-SA 4.0 ↗ · retrieved 2026-07
Other Austin models
- 10 —
- 10 hp —
- 12 —
- 12/4 —
- 12/4 "Low Loader" Taxi —
- 12/6 —
- 14 —
- 15 hp —
- 15/20 —
- 16 —
- 16 hp —
- 18 —
- 18/24 —
- 20 hp —
- 25/30 —
- 28 —
- 30 hp —
- 40 hp —
- 50 —
- 7 hp —
- 8 —
- A40 Countryman —
- A40 Devon —
- A40 Farina —
- A40 Somerset —
- A40 Sports —
- A50 Cambridge —
- A55 Cambridge —
- A70 —
- A90 —
- Ant —
- Apache —
- Arrow —
- Atlantic —
- Big 7 —
- Champ —
- FX3 —
- FX4 —
- Freeway —
- Gipsy —
- K8 —
- Kimberley —
- Sheerline —
- Twenty —
- de Luxe —
- SEVEN 1923
- A30 1924
- A40 1929