Citroën C15
The Citroën C15 is a panel van produced by the French manufacturer Citroën from late 1984 until 2006. It was the successor to the Citroën Acadiane, which had replaced the Citroën 2CV vans that pioneered the box van format from the 1950s to the 1970s, although the Acadiane continued in production alongside the C15 initially. The name refers to the car's 1,500 kg (3,310 lb) French gross vehicle weight rating and indicates its position beneath the C25 and C35 in Citroën's commercial vehicle range at the time.
Text adapted from “Citroën C15” on Wikipedia ↗ · CC BY-SA 4.0 ↗ · retrieved 2026-07
- Length
- 3,995 mm
Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0 · DVLA VEH0124 ↗
Similar machines
Matched on body class, era and origin from register data — never hand-picked.
Other Citroën models
- 2 CV Manx —
- 2CV AZAM —
- 2CV fourgonnette —
- 7U —
- Acadiane —
- Activa —
- Ami 6 —
- Ami 8 —
- Axel —
- B10 —
- B15 —
- BX 4TC —
- Berlingo électrique —
- C-Cactus —
- C-Triomphe —
- C-Élysée —
- C1 II —
- C2 R2 —
- C3 (CC21) —
- C3 Aircross (2017) —
- C3 Aircross (CC24) —
- C3 I —
- C3 II —
- C3 III —
- C3 IV —
- C3 Picasso —
- C3 Pluriel —
- C3-XR —
- C35 —
- C4 (2020) —
- C4 Aircross —
- C4 Picasso —
- C4 Picasso (1st generation) —
- C4 X —
- C5 Aircross —
- C5 I —
- C5 II —
- C5 X —
- Citroen ë-Berlingo —
- Citroën-Kégresse P17 —
- E-Méhari —
- Elysée —
- FAF —
- Fukang —
- G Van —
- GS Birotor —
- H Van —
- Hoffmann 2CV —