Citroën GS
The Citroën GS is a small family car manufactured and marketed by Citroën from 1970 to 1986 across two series. From 1970 to 1979 it was built as a fastback four-door saloon car and as a five-door estate car. A revised version, the GSA, was produced from late 1979 until 1986 in five-door hatchback or estate body styles – the latter after a facelift. Combined production reached approximately 2.5 million. It has a front-engine, front-wheel-drive layout and has seating for five passengers.
Text adapted from “Citroën GS” on Wikipedia ↗ · CC BY-SA 4.0 ↗ · retrieved 2026-07
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 —