Kaiser-Frazer
| Industry | Automotive | 
|---|---|
| Founded | 1945 | 
| Founder | Henry J. Kaiser Joseph W. Frazer | 
| Defunct | 1953 | 
| Fate | Merged to Willys-Overland | 
| Successor | Kaiser Jeep | 
| Headquarters | |
| Key people | Edgar F. Kaiser | 
| Products | Automobiles | 
The Kaiser-Frazer Corporation (1947–1953 as Kaiser-Frazer) was an American automobile company. It was founded jointly by industrialist Henry J. Kaiser and automobile executive Joseph W. Frazer. In 1947, the company acquired the automotive assets of Graham-Paige, of which Frazer had become president near the end of World War II. Kaiser-Frazer was one of a few US automakers to achieve success after World War II, if only for a few years. Joseph W. Frazer left the company in 1949, replaced as president by Henry's son Edgar F. Kaiser.
In 1953, Kaiser bought the ailing Willys-Overland company, mainly for its Jeep brand, and merged the Kaiser and Willys operations under the "Kaiser-Willys Corporation". The Willys-Overland branch was renamed "Willys Motors", until ten years later, in 1963, it was renamed Kaiser Jeep.