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Start your part requestThe Grandland (sold as Grandland X from launch until a rename to simply Grandland for the second generation) ran in its first generation from 2017 to around 2022, with the redesigned second generation arriving from 2022 onwards; cross members are platform-specific so parts from the two generations are not interchangeable. Always quote your exact registration to the breaker so they can confirm which platform your car sits on before buying.
This question spans the key generation boundary: the original Grandland X (2017–2022) sits on a different platform from the all-new second-generation Grandland (2022 onwards), so a 2019 cross member is very unlikely to suit a 2022 car. Name both registrations clearly when you contact the breaker, as there is overlap in calendar year 2022 where either generation could have been registered.
Trim level – whether SE, Design, Sport, Elite, or Ultimate – makes no difference to rear cross member fitment; the structural rear subframe is identical across the range for a given generation. Bear in mind that lower trim levels may have simpler rear underbody protection or towing-eye covers compared with higher trims, but the cross member itself is a straight match, so don't pay extra for a part pulled from a flagship car.
No – engine choice (petrol, diesel, or PHEV hybrid) and transmission type do not determine rear cross member fitment on the Grandland. The platform and body structure remain consistent regardless of what is under the bonnet, so source whichever good-condition cross member your breaker has available for the correct generation.
The Vauxhall Grandland and Opel Grandland are built on the same platform and are effectively the same vehicle sold under different badges in different markets, so the cross member is likely identical. However, confirm this with the breaker against your specific registration, as mid-production pressing changes or regional specification differences could affect fitment in ways that are difficult to verify without checking part numbers directly.
Both the 2018 and 2021 Grandland X sit within the same first-generation platform (2017–2022), so the cross member is likely compatible across those years. That said, confirm with the breaker using both registrations before purchasing, as mid-generation pressing or specification changes can sometimes affect structural components in ways that are not publicly documented.
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.