Coaxial Car Speakers
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Coaxial car speakers combine a woofer and tweeter in a single chassis, making them the simplest upgrade path from tired factory speakers to clear, balanced in car sound. Bass Junkies stocks coaxial sets from Focal, Hertz, JBL, Pioneer, Kenwood, Alpine and Vibe in every common UK fitment, from 4 inch dash drivers through to 6x9 oval parcel shelf units. Whether the goal is crisp vocals, stronger midbass or a clean tonal match for an aftermarket head unit, there is a pair to suit.
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How to choose coaxial car speakers in 2026
Coaxial car speakers are still the most popular upgrade for British drivers because they replace the original factory speakers in a single round drop-in unit. Modern coaxial designs combine a woofer and a tweeter on the same axis, so you get fuller mids and crisper highs without the cost or fitting time of a full component system. This 2026 buying guide explains the size, power and brand considerations that matter when you are picking the right pair for your car.
What size of coaxial speaker fits your car
Most UK cars use one of a small number of standard coaxial sizes. Knowing your size before you shop saves return hassle and gets you the best sound for the factory cut-out.
- 6.5 inch (16.5cm). By far the most common front-door size on Ford, Vauxhall, BMW, Audi, Volkswagen, Renault and most modern hatchbacks.
- 5.25 inch (13cm). Common in older Japanese cars and as a rear-shelf option on smaller hatchbacks.
- 4 inch (10cm). Found in dashboard tops on many superminis and city cars where space is tight.
- 6x9 inch. The classic rear-parcel-shelf upgrade for saloons and estates, delivering extra bass without a subwoofer.
Power handling and amplification
Coaxial speakers list two power numbers. The peak figure is marketing. The RMS, or continuous, rating is what matters. Match the speaker's RMS to your head unit or amplifier RMS for clean, distortion-free volume. Running unamplified speakers from a factory head unit is fine for everyday listening, but feeding them 40 to 60 watts RMS from a small four-channel amp transforms the sound, especially at motorway speed.
Sound quality features that matter
Cone material affects bass response and longevity. Polypropylene cones are durable in UK damp climates. Mica-filled and Kevlar cones are stiffer and give a cleaner mid-range. Silk or soft-dome tweeters smooth out high frequencies and reduce harshness on female vocals. Look for swivel-mount tweeters if you want to aim the high frequencies upward toward your ears for better staging.
Brand quality at a glance
- Pioneer. Strong all-round value with their A and D series, the safe choice for first-time upgraders.
- JL Audio. Premium-grade American engineering with their C1, C2 and C3 ranges, prized for clean mid-bass.
- Focal. French audiophile brand with the Performance and Auditor lines, the gold standard for natural vocal reproduction.
- Kicker. Loud, robust and bass-friendly, the KS and CS ranges suit modern pop, rap and electronic music.
- Kenwood, JVC and Sony. Reliable mid-tier brands with good warranties, ideal for budget-conscious upgrades.
- Alpine. Long heritage in OEM-grade sound, their S-Series and R-Series remain workshop favourites.
Compatibility and fitting
To drop new coaxial speakers into your car cleanly, you may need a few inexpensive accessories. The Bass Junkies team can list exactly what your car needs when you tell us the make, model and year.
- Fascia adapter. Lets the new head unit sit flush in your factory dashboard opening without cutting or modification.
- ISO harness. Plug-and-play wiring loom that connects the new stereo to your car's original electrical loom without splicing.
- Steering-wheel control adapter. Keeps your existing wheel-mounted volume, track and phone buttons working with the new aftermarket head unit.
- Aerial adapter. Converts your car's factory aerial connector to the DIN-style input found on most aftermarket stereos so radio reception stays strong.
Coaxial versus component speakers
Coaxial speakers fit fast and sound great in most cars. Component sets split the tweeter from the woofer, with a crossover in between, and give a wider sound stage at the cost of more fitting time and pillar trim work. If you mostly drive solo and want serious imaging, components win. If you want a clean upgrade in under an hour, coaxials are the right call.
Installation tips for first-time buyers
Sound deadening on the inner door skin doubles the bass output of any coaxial speaker for under 30 pounds in materials. Use a small foam ring around the magnet to seal the speaker into the door cavity and stop the rear wave cancelling the front. Wire from the head unit to the door speakers with 1.5mm twin core for clean signal, and route through the original loom grommet so the door card sits flat with no rattles.
Bass Junkies has been fitting and supplying car audio across the UK since 1995. Our Wolverhampton workshop tests every product we sell, and our team can advise on the best match for your car, your budget and the sound you want. If you would prefer to talk it through before ordering, call us on 01902 863 005 or drop in for a demo.
















































