Whenever I hear weird car names, I often stop, narrow my eyes and ask, are you serious? Yes, sometimes I feel these worst car names are suggested on purpose, but at other times, I believe these ugly car names are the result of translation, branding haste, or a team trying too hard to sound global. That said, sometimes these monikers land in the rare sweet spot where the odd car names make the car itself unforgettable.
While we think of them silly names for cars, mostly there is a rationale behind this. Some of the examples include Volkswagen moving toward familiar nameplates like ID. Polo, Audi adopting a global letter plus number naming system, and Buick choosing a name and alphanumeric tag (they are going to do it for Electra EV).
Why are they doing this? According to J.D. Power, almost fifty percent of purchasers select one model over another due to previous brand or model experience, and branding research by the American Marketing Association observes that emotionally resonant, short, repetitive, alliterative and rhyming names are more memorable.
What actually makes a Car Name Weird?

Well, it could be different reasons:
- The name sounds strange in its target language
- It is odd in another language
- Most people cannot pronounce it easily
- The name sounds like a sentence rather than a model name
Naming research also reveals that a figurative and emotionally charged name can influence the way individuals respond to a product and this is why automakers continue to pursue names that are memorable rather than just descriptive.
That is why the weirdest names are often the most useful for discussion. They do one job very well, they get in your head. They cause confusion rest of the time, and it is precisely this confusion that makes these stupid car names interesting.
The following are 15 real-life examples that support the point.
15 Weird Car Names that Refuse to be Ignored
1. Daihatsu Naked

This one is hard to beat because it is so blunt. We cannot interpret this name in anyway. In my view, it is a small cute car and its name sounds like it has left the factory without getting dressed. You can give it a cute yellow car name like Honey or cool white car name like Crisp Mirage to forget its real moniker.
2. Isuzu Mysterious Utility Wizard
This name does not sound like a car. It is rather a spell in a fantasy game. That is precisely the reason it makes a strange name, as no one can forget Mysterious Utility Wizard name after hearing it once. Although it is not an ugly vehicle like Pontiac Aztek, it is certainly not very good-looking.
3. Mazda Laputa
This name landed on our list of unusual car names because of its meaning in Spanish speaking market, though the original reference comes from Gulliver’s Travels. It is a standard case of a name which sounds good in one language, but collapses in another.
4. Ford Probe
There is nothing warm, athletic, or aspirational about Probe. It sounds clinical and perhaps a bit invasive, which is not suitable when you want to sell a car. Nevertheless, it could be a fun car to drive.
5. Volkswagen Tiguan
Volkswagen says Tiguan came from a contest and is a portmanteau of tiger and iguana. While this origin might make the name memorable, the result sounds like two animals are competing for one badge just to see how it works. That said, VW gave it a good enough design features that make it one of the best looking vehicles on the list.
6. Ferrari LaFerrari
Ferrari relied so much on its own name that it eventually felt like a bit of a joke. It is official, it is dramatic and it still sounds like the brand was speaking to itself in a mirror. Perhaps, more popular red car names like Blaze or Phonenix would suit it better.
7. Hyundai Trajet
This one falls somewhere between graceful and awkward and that is why people do not forget it.It looks like a serious word, but it does not quite sound like it means it.
8. Nissan Friend-ME
This is as awkward as a concept car can get. It sounds as a social media cry in the middle of an auto show, and that is precisely why it is so outdated now.
9. Mazda Titan Dump
The issue is not in the word Titan, but in the Dump. When that word appears in the badge, the mind takes you directly to the wrong place.
10. Honda W.O.W.
Honda said the acronym stood for Wonderful Open-Hearted Wagon, and the car was built with dogs in mind. That is what makes it cute, yet the name is so keen on impressing that it ends up circling back to weird.
11. ORA Funky Cat
This one possessed character in the name itself, and that is why so many people paid attention to it even before the car itself. The name is jovial, yet so light-hearted that it feels more like a child toy than a small electric vehicle.
12. Mitsubishi Minica Lettuce
A car named after a green vegetable is bizarre in the most positive sense of this word. This is one of funniest car names on this list, and that makes you wonder how the bosses actually allowed it to be made.
13. Tarpan Honker
This name sounds like something a grumpy goose would pick for a truck. While it is short and catchy, when you hear it, you cannot help but imagine a loud horn honking in the middle of a muddy field.
14. Toyota Vellfire
This name is like a fantasy villain attempting to be luxurious. It is not necessarily bad, but it is weird enough to make you stop, then repeat it just to be sure that you have heard it correctly.
15. Suzuki Celerio
Something vegetable-adjacent about this one, as well, which lends it a healthy, somewhat disoriented feel. The Celerio name sounds friendly, yet not particularly automotive. If you do not like calling it Celerio, girls can give it a cute car name like Daisy while guys might want blue car names such as Azure Spirit or Crystal Ocean. You could even opt for a black car name like Nightfall if you think the original name is just a bit too whimsical for your style and you would rather give the vehicle a more serious edge.
Weird car names continue to exist since they do something that boring badges seldom do, they provoke a response. One is witty, one is reckless, and another one is funny by accident. The best ones endure since they are repeated and by then the name has already done half the marketing job for the car.
Frequently Asked Questions
Names are picked through contests, portmanteau experiments, or bold branding swings, and sometimes a name works perfectly in one language but misfires in another. The core logic is that distinctive names stick in buyers’ minds longer than generic ones.
Yes. The ORA Funky Cat generated buzz before the car even launched. Ferrari LaFerrari became iconic through sheer audacity. Sometimes the stranger the name, the more free marketing it creates.
Largely yes. Volkswagen, Audi, and Buick have all shifted to systematic letter-and-number naming for global clarity. Chinese EV brands like ORA are the exception, still using bold names to stand out in a crowded market.
