Feb. 4, 2026Updated Feb. 5, 2026, 12:36 a.m. ET

The United Auto Workers said late Wednesday night that it had secured a tentative first contract with Volkswagen AG at the automaker’s assembly plant in Tennessee — a historic milestone for a union that had long struggled to break into the South’s fast-growing auto industry.

The deal, which now goes to a vote by members, includes a 20% raise over the four-year contract, what union officials described as a 20% health care cost reduction for members, as well as long-term job security provisions for the Chattanooga plant that makes Atlas, Atlas Cross Sport and ID.4 SUVs. It also includes a $6,550 worker bonus upon ratification, plus annual $2,550 bonuses.

“This is a historic moment, not only for these members, but for the union as a whole, and the entire working class,” said UAW President Shawn Fain in a Facebook Live announcement of the deal, flanked by several members of the union’s bargaining team and his chief of staff.

UAW President Shawn Fain announces a tentative agreement has been reached Wednesday for Volkswagen workers in Chattanooga, Tenn.

Workers at the plant had overwhelmingly voted with 73% in favor of joining the union in April 2024, making it the UAW’s first foreign-owned plant in the South to organize.

The latest development comes after a broader southern car factory organizing push by the UAW has largely sputtered out, and the larger union has recently been distracted with various crises, including senior leadership turmoil and harsh criticism by a reform watchdog. But the VW tentative contract, after months of difficult bargaining and threats of a strike, is sure to provide a major boost for the union and Fain, as the UAW heads into an tumultuous election year for its top leadership positions.



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