Fallschirmjagers riding Kübelwagen, France 1944
U.S. soldiers in captured Volkswagen Kubelwagen WH-1638288
A group of Italian soldiers posing with a Kubelwagen WL-185252 DAK 1941
Kubelwagen WH-280766 in Desert 2
VW Kubelwagen WL-596259 of the Luftwaffe unit
Kübelwagen WH-1276808 Crete
Kubelwagen WH 937823 of the 95. Infanterie-Division
VW Kubelwagen of the Afrika Korps, Derna
Kubelwagen WH-1432437 Italy 1943
Afrika Korps Kubelwagen with sand tires 1943
Kubelwagen WH-644814 from DAK Bengasi
VW Kubelwagen with balloon tires, North Africa
Kubelwagen of the Feldgendarmerie, Eastern Front 1943
Kubelwagen of the Waffen SS
Afrika Korps soldier with VW Type 82 Kübelwagen WH-611327
Kubelwagen and Panzer III, Winter
Kubelwagen WL-358126 Eastern Front
Destroyed VW Kübelwagen Foy-Notre-Dame, Belgium 29 December 1944
Kubelwagen WH-1636867 captured by 1st Infantry Division 30 April 1945
Volkswagen Kübelwagen WL-410637 Tunisia
Kubelwagen of the Afrika Korps
Kubelwagen WH-1276831 Crimea
Afrika Korps WH-280766 in Desert
Kubelwagen of the 21. Panzer-Division, Afrika Korps
U.S. troops riding in a Volkswagen captured in Sicily 1943
Kubelwagen WH-1430743 of the 23 Panzer Division Kharkov
75th Infantry Division captures Das Reich Kubelwagen SS-156196 in Beffe, Belgium 7 January 1945
Senator James A. Mead in captured Kubelwagen Tunisia 1944
Kubelwagen WH-1276828 of the 22 Infanterie Division
VW Kubelwagen WH-937752 of the Afrika Korps
Kubelwagen and SS-mann Amiens 1944
Kubelwagen FP-14365 and SdKfz 7 from Afrika Korps
Captured Kubelwagen Africa, 20 June 1942
Hans Joachim Marseille next to a Kubelwagen named “OTTO”
Kübelwagen (“bucket seat car”) was a military vehicle designed by Ferdinand Porsche and built by Volkswagen during World War II for use by the German military forces. Based heavily on the Volkswagen Beetle, it was prototyped as the Type 62, but eventually became known internally as the Type 82.