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Start your part requestThe first-generation Citan (W415) ran from 2012 to 2021, and front-end panels including the grille are generally shared across that generation regardless of body length or roof height. A facelift arrived in 2016 which updated the front-end styling, so it is worth treating pre-2016 and post-2016 cars as separate families when sourcing a grille. Always confirm the exact part against your registration with the breaker before buying.
Your 2014 car is a pre-facelift W415 and your 2018 car is a post-2016 facelift W415, so they sit either side of the key styling boundary. The grille design changed at that facelift, so the two are unlikely to be a straight swap, but whether a specific used panel crosses that boundary is something you must confirm with the breaker against both registrations before purchasing.
No — wheelbase and body length do not affect front grille fitment on the Citan; the front end is shared across the different body lengths within the same generation and facelift period. When speaking to a breaker, focus on the model year and whether the car is pre- or post-2016 facelift rather than the body length.
Trim level does not affect the structural fitment of the front grille on the Citan — the grille opening and mounting points are the same across trims within a given facelift period. That said, higher or sportier trim variants may have had minor cosmetic differences such as different finishes or badging on the grille surround, so if appearance matters to you, let the breaker know your exact trim when requesting the part.
Both a 2019 and a 2021 Citan are post-facelift W415 models, so they sit within the same front-end design period and the grille is expected to be the same. This is one of the more straightforward fitment scenarios, but you should still ask the breaker to verify against your specific registration to be certain before committing to a purchase.
The Citan Tourer (passenger) and Mixto variants share the same W415 platform and front end as the panel van, so the front grille is not affected by which body style the donor vehicle was. The generation and facelift period — pre- or post-2016 — are what matter, so focus on matching those when talking to a breaker.
Fitment guidance is general and mistakes can happen - vehicle specifications vary and manufacturers make mid-production changes. Always confirm the exact part against your registration with the supplying breaker before buying.