December/2016 Year End Sales Thread
#31
Volvo
https://www.media.volvocars.com/us/e...december-sales
Volvo Announces December Sales
Jan 04, 2017 ID: 202260
Finishes 2016 with 18 Percent Sales Increase
ROCKLEIGH, N.J. (Jan. 4, 2017) - Volvo Car USA, LLC, (VCUSA) reported U.S. sales of 10,129 vehicles in December, an 8.4 percent increase versus December 2015 and the best December since 2004. Sales for the month were led by the award-winning XC90 with 3,308 vehicles sold.
For the year, VCUSA sold 82,724 vehicles, up 18.1 percent year-over-year. The XC90 finished 2016 in the top spot with 32,526 vehicles sold, followed by the XC60 and S60.
“In addition to the positive sales results, Volvo made significant strides in brand transformation in the United States,” said Lex Kerssemakers, President and CEO, Volvo Car USA. “We were just recently named one of the top five most googled automotive brands of the year, a clear testament to both our brand and product success.”
Volvo is implementing a sweeping $11 billion transformation plan that has involved the development of its own modular vehicle architecture, a new engine range, global manufacturing capability, a completely renewed product range and world leading developments in safety, autonomous driving and connectivity.
For sales by model click here: https://www.media.volvocars.com/us/e.../sales-volumes
#32
Porsche
http://press.porsche.com/news/release.php?id=1010
Porsche Sets Record in 2016 with 54,280 Vehicles Delivered in the U.S.
Porsche Sets Record in 2016 with 54,280 Vehicles Delivered in the U.S.
"Our product offensive continued to thrive with the arrival of 23 new model variants in 2016. As a result, we achieved our 7th consecutive year of increased sales," commented Klaus Zellmer, President and CEO, Porsche Cars North America. "I am confident we will see steady growth in 2017 with balanced supply and demand.
""Macan sales accelerated strongly in 2016 with the introduction of new variants. Porsche plug-in hybrid sales were also promising with 2,111 Cayenne S E-Hybrid models retailed, a 92 percent increase over 2015," said Joe Lawrence, Executive Vice President and COO, Porsche Cars North America. "In 2017, we look forward to the highly anticipated, all-new Panamera, as well as the first full year of sales for our new 911 and 718 sports car models."
Porsche Approved Certified Pre-Owned vehicle sales in the United States were 1,730 for December 2016. CPO sales year-to-date stand at 16,981 units, a 15.1 percent increase compared to the same period in 2015.
#33
December 2016
Pre-Entry-Level
1. A3 - 2,904
2. CLA - 1,876
3. 2 - 1,085
4. ILX - 1,079
5. CT - 968
Entry-Level
1. C - 7,345
2. 3 - 6,740
3. Q50 - 5,794
4. IS - 4,432
5. A4 - 4,009
6. TLX - 3,621
7. MKZ - 2,650
8. ATS - 2,292
9. S60/CC - 2,093
10. Giulia - 29
11. XE - N/A
Entry-Level Combined
1. 3+4 - 10,374
2. C-Class ALL - 7,345
3. Q50 + Q60 - 6,812
4. IS + RC - 5474
5. A4 + A5 - 4,600
6. ATS ALL - 2,292
Mid-Level
1. E/CLS - 4,851
2. 5 - 2,115
3. A6 - 2,016
4. CTS - 1,697
5. G80 - 1,354
6. GS - 1,325
7. S90 - 1,127
8. Q70 - 580
9. MKS - 215
10. RLX/RL - 192
11. XF - N/A
Flagship
1. S - 1,494
2. 7 - 1,313
3. LS - 609
4. A8 - 501
5. G90 - 379
6. Panamera - 36
7. XJ - N/A
Premium Large
1. Continental - 1,845
2. CT6 - 1,293
3. K900 - 80
Check out the Rogue! I credit the Star Wars push.
1. Rogue - 40,447
2. CR-V - 37,778
3. RAV-4 - 37,214
4. Accord - 33,873
5. Camry - 33,412
6. Civic - 31,482
7. Corolla - 29,402
8. Highlander - 25,425
9. Altima - 24,763
10. Sentra - 17,037
Pre-Entry-Level
1. A3 - 2,904
2. CLA - 1,876
3. 2 - 1,085
4. ILX - 1,079
5. CT - 968
Entry-Level
1. C - 7,345
2. 3 - 6,740
3. Q50 - 5,794
4. IS - 4,432
5. A4 - 4,009
6. TLX - 3,621
7. MKZ - 2,650
8. ATS - 2,292
9. S60/CC - 2,093
10. Giulia - 29
11. XE - N/A
Entry-Level Combined
1. 3+4 - 10,374
2. C-Class ALL - 7,345
3. Q50 + Q60 - 6,812
4. IS + RC - 5474
5. A4 + A5 - 4,600
6. ATS ALL - 2,292
Mid-Level
1. E/CLS - 4,851
2. 5 - 2,115
3. A6 - 2,016
4. CTS - 1,697
5. G80 - 1,354
6. GS - 1,325
7. S90 - 1,127
8. Q70 - 580
9. MKS - 215
10. RLX/RL - 192
11. XF - N/A
Flagship
1. S - 1,494
2. 7 - 1,313
3. LS - 609
4. A8 - 501
5. G90 - 379
6. Panamera - 36
7. XJ - N/A
Premium Large
1. Continental - 1,845
2. CT6 - 1,293
3. K900 - 80
Check out the Rogue! I credit the Star Wars push.
1. Rogue - 40,447
2. CR-V - 37,778
3. RAV-4 - 37,214
4. Accord - 33,873
5. Camry - 33,412
6. Civic - 31,482
7. Corolla - 29,402
8. Highlander - 25,425
9. Altima - 24,763
10. Sentra - 17,037
Best way to classify them would be to combine the ES+IS+RC as the ES is pretty much the comfy ride while IS the sporty one.
#34
Yikes, wonder where I got that other number from.
No problem. I'll add the ES to the entry level category, but won't be combining it with the IS & RC. I made that column so different body styles of the same car could be included in one tally (i.e. 3-series sedan, 4-series coupe/vert/GC).
No problem. I'll add the ES to the entry level category, but won't be combining it with the IS & RC. I made that column so different body styles of the same car could be included in one tally (i.e. 3-series sedan, 4-series coupe/vert/GC).
#35
Wow a major swing from BMW at #1 last year to MB now #1 with Lexus holding consistently at a high #2 both years. Lexus is primed for #1. I don't know why the GS isn't really connecting with mainstream buyers, is it the spindle? (though the spindle does well for other models). I personally have an issue with how the GS is packaged and how the F-Sport only allows some super sporty feel and no luxury, its what keeps me personally from getting one.
I believe the CT is another factor, it started off well, maybe it just got too old. Anybody know when we can expect any new CT or CT replacement concept and/or reveals?
I believe the CT is another factor, it started off well, maybe it just got too old. Anybody know when we can expect any new CT or CT replacement concept and/or reveals?
#36
AutoNews
http://www.autonews.com/article/2017...IL01/301049997
LUXURY: Mercedes recaptures crown after 2-year hiatus
January 4, 2017 @ 6:15 pm
Have an opinion about this story? Click here to submit a Letter to the Editor, and we may publish it in print.
Mercedes took the 2016 U.S. luxury title even though its sales for the year declined, but the results were still strong enough to beat Lexus and last year’s winner, BMW.
The Daimler AG unit said its U.S. sales fell 0.8 percent to 340,237 in 2016, with December sales dropping 6.4 percent to 32,011 vehicles. Mercedes finished the year with a 16.8 percent share of the U.S. luxury market. It last won the luxury title in 2013.
Toyota’s Lexus brand said 2016 U.S. sales slipped 3.9 percent to 331,228 vehicles. Lexus, behind year-end discounts, topped the segment in December even with sales dropping 0.5 percent to 41,182 vehicles. The brand finished the year with a 16.4 percent share of luxury sales.
BMW’s namesake brand finished a distant 3rd in 2016 with sales slipping 9.5 percent to 313,174 vehicles. Sales fell 5.2 percent in December to 32,835. It finished the year with a 15.5 percent market share. BMW won the U.S. luxury sales crown in 2014 and 2015.
Audi’s 2016 U.S. sales improved 4 percent to 210,213 vehicles -- good for 4th place.
Cadillac, Acura, Infiniti and Lincoln rounded out the next 4 spots in luxury sales.
Hyundai’s new Genesis luxury brand, which was launched in the U.S. in August, finished the year with sales of 6,948 vehicles -- a 0.3 percent share of the market.
Jaguar had the biggest annual gain -- 116 percent -- of all luxury brands last year, with U.S. volume rising to 31,243 behind the launch of the brand’s 1st crossover, the F-Pace.
Note: Mercedes results do not include Sprinter or Metris sales. BMW results do not include the Mini brand.
Mercedes finished the year with a 16.8 percent share of the U.S. luxury market. It last won the U.S. luxury title in 2013. Photo credit: DAVID PHILLIPSSend us a Letter
Have an opinion about this story? Click here to submit a Letter to the Editor, and we may publish it in print.
Mercedes took the 2016 U.S. luxury title even though its sales for the year declined, but the results were still strong enough to beat Lexus and last year’s winner, BMW.
The Daimler AG unit said its U.S. sales fell 0.8 percent to 340,237 in 2016, with December sales dropping 6.4 percent to 32,011 vehicles. Mercedes finished the year with a 16.8 percent share of the U.S. luxury market. It last won the luxury title in 2013.
Toyota’s Lexus brand said 2016 U.S. sales slipped 3.9 percent to 331,228 vehicles. Lexus, behind year-end discounts, topped the segment in December even with sales dropping 0.5 percent to 41,182 vehicles. The brand finished the year with a 16.4 percent share of luxury sales.
BMW’s namesake brand finished a distant 3rd in 2016 with sales slipping 9.5 percent to 313,174 vehicles. Sales fell 5.2 percent in December to 32,835. It finished the year with a 15.5 percent market share. BMW won the U.S. luxury sales crown in 2014 and 2015.
Audi’s 2016 U.S. sales improved 4 percent to 210,213 vehicles -- good for 4th place.
Cadillac, Acura, Infiniti and Lincoln rounded out the next 4 spots in luxury sales.
Hyundai’s new Genesis luxury brand, which was launched in the U.S. in August, finished the year with sales of 6,948 vehicles -- a 0.3 percent share of the market.
Jaguar had the biggest annual gain -- 116 percent -- of all luxury brands last year, with U.S. volume rising to 31,243 behind the launch of the brand’s 1st crossover, the F-Pace.
Note: Mercedes results do not include Sprinter or Metris sales. BMW results do not include the Mini brand.
Last edited by GS69; 01-05-17 at 06:44 AM.
#37
AutoNews
http://www.autonews.com/article/20170104/RETAIL01/170109972/u-s-industry-sets-new-high-behind-solid-gm-nissan-honda-gains
U.S. industry sets new high behind solid GM, Nissan, Honda gains
SAAR hits 2016 peak of 18.38 million
January 4, 2017 @ 9:30 am
Overall sales rose by more than 56,000, or 0.3 percent, over the 2015 record. It was the 7th straight year of sales gains, an impressive streak and rebound for an industry that was down on its heels during the Great Recession. Volume rose 3 percent in December, well ahead of forecasts, pushing 2016's final sales tally to 17,539,052 cars and light trucks.
The seasonally adjusted, annualized sales rate hit 18.38 million, the highest pace of the year and fifth-highest of all time.
Prior to today's results, analysts polled by Bloomberg projected that industrywide deliveries would come in at a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 17.6 million.
U.S. light-vehicle sales totaled 15.85 million through November. That was just 6,418 ahead of the year-earlier pace, a clear sign the market had hit a plateau. Yet there was apparently more steam left for December than analysts expected.
Company by company
Volume rose 10 percent at GM for a second straight month. Nissan Motor Co. advanced 9.7 percent and American Honda posted a 6.4 percent gain. Toyota Motor Corp. rose 2 percent and Ford Motor Co. edged up 0.1 percent, while Fiat Chrysler recorded its third straight double-digit decline.
All 4 of GM’s U.S. brands rose. Chevrolet led the way with a 13 percent increase, followed by GMC (5.8 percent), Cadillac (3.2 percent) and Buick (2.8 percent).
GM said its rental sales rose in December but finished 2016 down nearly 74,000 vehicles, or 18 percent, compared with 2015. The company said its retail deliveries -- a key priority in recent years -- rose more than 3 percent last month.
Nissan Motor's December increase reflected an 8.3 percent gain at its namesake division and a 21 percent jump at Infiniti.
The Nissan division set an all-time record with 1,426,130 U.S. sales in 2016, up 5.5 percent. And in a sign of how strong light-truck demand has become across the industry, the Rogue crossover topped the Altima sedan to become Nissan’s top-selling U.S. model for the first time, with 2016 sales of 329,904, or an increase of 15 percent.
Volume rose 6.9 percent at the Honda division and 1.9 percent at Acura. For the year, Honda Division's U.S. sales rose 4.8 percent to a record 1,476,582.
At Ford Motor, sales were off 0.8 percent at the Ford division and up 18 percent at Lincoln. Toyota said volume edged up 2.6 percent at the Toyota division but slipped 0.5 percent at Lexus last month.
Deliveries dropped 10 percent at FCA US behind a 6 percent decline at Jeep and a 34 percent drop in fleet shipments. Ram was the only FCA US brand to gain last month, with a 10 percent rise. Jeep and Ram posted U.S. sales records last year.
Volume dropped 1.9 percent at Hyundai but rose 0.2 percent at Kia.
GM today estimated the December SAAR at 18.2 million, which would deliver a record year for the industry. Photo credit: DAVID PHILLIPS
Forecasts
The December results among major automakers topped many forecasts. GM sales were predicted to rise 4.4 percent, based on the average analyst estimate compiled by Bloomberg. Deliveries at Fiat Chrysler, which has discontinued compact and midsize sedans, were projected to drop 14 percent. Volumes at Ford, Toyota, Honda and Nissan were all forecast to slip less than 3 percent.
Among other brands, Infiniti, Kia, Land Rover, Mercedes-Benz, Hyundai, Subaru, Audi and Porsche also set annual U.S. sales records in 2016.
Light trucks, led by crossovers, continue to drive the market and accounted for a record 60.7 percent of all light-vehicle deliveries in 2016. For the year, car demand skidded 8.9 percent while light-truck demand advanced 7.4 percent.
The Nissan division set an all-time record with 1,426,130 U.S. sales in 2016, up 5.5 percent. Photo credit: DAVID PHILLIPS
Automakers and dealers used heavy promotions and generous deals to lure consumers to showrooms last month. A post-election bounce in U.S. equity markets also provided a lift to industry sales in December, some analysts say.
“Key economic indicators, especially consumer confidence, continue to reflect optimism about the U.S. economy and strong customer demand continues to drive a very healthy U.S. auto industry,” Mustafa Mohatarem, GM’s chief economist, said today. “We believe the U.S. auto industry remains well-positioned for sales to continue at or near record levels in 2017.”
Incentives
ALG estimates that average incentives on new vehicles spiked 20 percent to $3,673 last month compared with December 2015. (See chart below.) Among the biggest spenders on December discounts were the Detroit 3 and Volkswagen Group. Even Subaru, which has been able to offer some of the industry’s leanest new-vehicle deals, saw average incentives more than double to $1,162 last month, ALG says.
Since the 2008-09 Great Recession, U.S. light-vehicle sales have grown by more than a million units a year on average while delivering seven straight annual gains, the longest streak since 1909-17.
Pent-up demand, more leasing, favorable finance deals and steady job growth have driven new-vehicle sales since the downturn.
But analysts warn that rising interest rates and a peaking retail market will force automakers to cut production this year.
“Substantial incentive hikes ... haven’t resulted in retail growth, while inventories continue to grow,” said Tim Fleming, an analyst at Kelley Blue Book. “An increasing supply of used cars, especially off-lease units, is already putting pressure on residual values, which could impact the sustainability of today’s high levels of leasing. We are looking for manufacturers to cut production in the new year to better match slowing consumer demand and alleviate the need for elevated incentives.”
#39
I don't know why the GS isn't really connecting with mainstream buyers, is it the spindle? (though the spindle does well for other models). I personally have an issue with how the GS is packaged and how the F-Sport only allows some super sporty feel and no luxury, its what keeps me personally from getting one.
I'm not exactly sure why GS sales are so lackluster, but I know good lease deals are harder to come by on them, and availability, at least around me, still stinks. I was at my dealer last week and they didn't even have one new GS on the lot. I think someone comes in for a mid size sedan they just automatically stick them in an ES.
#40
I don't know why the GS isn't really connecting with mainstream buyers, is it the spindle? (though the spindle does well for other models). I personally have an issue with how the GS is packaged and how the F-Sport only allows some super sporty feel and no luxury, its what keeps me personally from getting one.
I believe the CT is another factor, it started off well, maybe it just got too old. Anybody know when we can expect any new CT or CT replacement concept and/or reveals?
This is a bit of a Lexus issue, not a GS issue, as pretty much all F Sport packages require giving up some of the luxury features, with, in my opinion, the IS being the worst offender. When I bought my IS I avoided the F Sport package because you couldn't get things like ventilated seats (added in 15), memory seats, etc. The GS F Sport doesn't make you give up too much.
I'm not exactly sure why GS sales are so lackluster, but I know good lease deals are harder to come by on them, and availability, at least around me, still stinks. I was at my dealer last week and they didn't even have one new GS on the lot. I think someone comes in for a mid size sedan they just automatically stick them in an ES.
#41
so lexus sedan/coupe sales were down 20% for the year overall, and suv sales were up 12%. tells about all you need to know right there.
view sales chart here:
http://pressroom.toyota.com/article_...rticle_id=5874
view sales chart here:
http://pressroom.toyota.com/article_...rticle_id=5874
#42
Wow a major swing from BMW at #1 last year to MB now #1 with Lexus holding consistently at a high #2 both years. Lexus is primed for #1. I don't know why the GS isn't really connecting with mainstream buyers, is it the spindle? (though the spindle does well for other models). I personally have an issue with how the GS is packaged and how the F-Sport only allows some super sporty feel and no luxury, its what keeps me personally from getting one.
I believe the CT is another factor, it started off well, maybe it just got too old. Anybody know when we can expect any new CT or CT replacement concept and/or reveals?
I believe the CT is another factor, it started off well, maybe it just got too old. Anybody know when we can expect any new CT or CT replacement concept and/or reveals?
I believe it is mainly because the average buyer wont understand fwd, rwd, etc. When they walk into the showroom, it is difficult to ignore than the ES is just as good a mid sized sedan as the GS, and actually has more rear leg room and trunk space (?), while costing thousands less. It all boils down to this.
#44
Atp
I was able to find the ATP average for overall brands (Honda, Toyota) but not individual brands (Acura, Lexus): http://mediaroom.kbb.com/2017-01-04-...ok?printable=1
GoodCarBadCar has some helpful info tho: http://www.goodcarbadcar.net/2017/01...ury-autos.html
The Top 15 Luxury Sales for 2016: Lexus gets 3 entry level vehicles (RX, ES, NX) whereas Mercedes gets 1 entry (Cclass) & 2 middle level (Eclass & GLE). This would suggest Mercedes ATP is higher.
Their Top 15 for vehicles that start over $50,000 shows 1 Lexus (GX) @ #9 & 4 Mercedes: GLE (#1), E (#2), GLS (#7) & Sclass (#11). Again, suggesting a higher ATP average.
BMW did not have that great of a year so they have a less of a showing than Mercedes in the charts.
#45
Year end totals below; hope this came out ok. Didn't have time to do all of the segments. Underlined cars are out of production.
Cars-
City/minicars:
1. Chevrolet Spark - 35,511
2. Fiat 500 - 15,437
3. smart - 6,211
4. Mitsubishi i-MiEV - 94
5. Scion iQ - 6
Subcompacts:
1. Kia Soul - 145,768
2. Nissan Versa - 132,214
3. Hyundai Accent - 79,766
4. Honda Fit - 56,630
5. Chevrolet Sonic - 55,255
6. Ford Fiesta - 48,807
7. MINI (all models except Countryman) - 39,324
8. Toyota Yaris - 38,855
9. Kia Rio - 28,700
10. Mitsubishi Mirage - 22,226
11. VW Beetle - 15,667
12. Nissan Leaf - 14,006
13. Fiat 500L - 3,118
14. Scion xB - 2,677
15. Chevrolet Bolt - 579
16. Nissan Cube - 15
17. Scion xD - 9
18. Mazda 2 - 3
Compacts:
1. Toyota Corolla - 378,210
2. Honda Civic - 366,927
3. Nissan Sentra - 214,709
4. Hyundai Elantra - 208,319
5. Chevrolet Cruze - 188,876
6. Ford Focus - 168,789
7. VW Jetta - 121,107
8. Kia Forte - 103,292
9. Subaru Crosstrek - 95,677*
10. Mazda 3 - 95,567
11. VW Golf - 61,687
12. Subaru Impreza - 55,238*
13. Dodge Dart - 43,402
14. Subaru WRX/STI - 33,279*
15. Buick Verano - 30,277
16. Chevrolet Volt - 24,739
17. Ford C-Max - 19,834
18. Mitsubishi Lancer - 14,304
19. Toyota Mirai - 1,034
20. Honda Insight - 67
21. Honda Clarity FCV - 8
*Combined Subaru Impreza, WRX/STI, and Crosstrek sales - 184,194, placing them at 6th place
Midsize:
1. Toyota Camry - 388,618
2. Honda Accord - 345,225
3. Nissan Altima - 307,380
4. Ford Fusion - 265,840
5. Chevrolet Malibu - 227,881
6. Hyundai Sonata - 199,416
7. Subaru Outback - 182,898*
8. Toyota Prius - 136,632
9. Kia Optima - 124,203
10. VW Passat - 73,002
11. Subaru Legacy - 65,306*
12. Chrysler 200 - 57,294
13. Mazda 6 - 45,520
14. Buick Regal - 19,833
15. VW CC - 3,237
16. Dodge Avenger - 45
*Combined Subaru Legacy and Outback sales - 248,204, placing them at 5th place.
Fullsize:
1. Chevrolet Impala - 97,006
2. Dodge Charger - 95,437
3. Nissan Maxima - 62,670^
4. Chrysler 300 - 53,241
5. Toyota Avalon - 48,080
6. Ford Taurus - 34,626*
7. Buick LaCrosse - 27,582
8. Ford Police Interceptor - 9,472*
9. Hyundai Azera - 4,942
10. Kia Cadenza - 4,738
11. Chevrolet SS - 3,013
12. Chevrolet Caprice - 1,021
*Combined Ford Taurus and Interceptor - 44,098
^Yes, I know the Maxima walks a delicate line between mainstream fullsize and premium midsize
Sporty coupes and convertibles
1. Ford Mustang - 105,932
2. Chevrolet Camaro - 72,705
3. Dodge Challenger - 64,433
4. Hyundai Veloster - 30,053
5. Scion tC - 9,336
6. Buick Cascada - 7,153
7. VW Eos - 387
Hyundai Genesis coupe sales not provided
Sports cars and roadsters:
1. Chevrolet Corvette - 29,995
2. Mazda MX-5 Miata - 9,465
3. Porsche 911 - 8,901
4. Toyota 86/Scion FR-S - 7,457
5. Porsche Boxster/Cayman - 6,260
6. Nissan 370Z - 5,913
7. Subaru BRZ - 4,141
8. Mercedes-Benz SL - 3,722
9. Mercedes-Benz SLC/SLK - 3,397
10. Audi TT - 3,044
11. Fiat Spider - 2,475
12. Honda CR-Z - 2,338
13. BMW i8 - 1,594
14. Mercedes-Benz AMG GT - 1,227
15. BMW Z4 - 1,187
16. Audi R8 - 736
17. Nissan GT-R - 698
18. Dodge Viper - 630
SUVs and Crossovers-
Subcompact:
1. Jeep Renegade - 106,606
2. Honda HR-V - 82,041
3. Chevrolet Trax - 79,016
4. Buick Encore - 78,565
5. Mitsubishi Outlander Sport - 33,067
6. Nissan Juke - 19,577
7. Mazda CX-3 - 18,557
8. MINI Countryman - 12,706
9. Fiat 500X - 11,712
Compact:
1. Honda CR-V - 357,335
2. Toyota RAV4 - 352,154
3. Nissan Rogue - 329,904
4. Ford Escape - 307,069
5. Chevrolet Equinox - 242,195
6. Jeep Cherokee - 199,736
7. Jeep Wrangler - 191,774
8. Subaru Forester - 178,593
9. Jeep Patriot - 121,926*
10. Mazda CX-5 - 112,235
11. Jeep Compass - 94,061
12. Hyundai Tucson - 89,713
13. GMC Terrain - 87,925
14. Kia Sportage - 81,066
15. VW Tiguan - 43,638
16. Mitsubishi Outlander - 26,576
17. Buick Envision - 14,193
*Production of the Patriot ended in December, 2017 models are available
Midsize:
1. Jeep Grand Cherokee - 212,273
2. Ford Edge - 134,588
3. Hyundai Santa Fe - 131,257*
4. Kia Sorento - 114,733
5. Toyota 4Runner - 111,970
6. Dodge Journey - 106,759
7. Nissan Murano - 86,953
8. Honda Crosstour - 726
9. Toyota Venza - 589
10. Nissan Xterra - 38
11. Toyota FJ Cruiser - 9
*No breakdown provided between large Sante Fe and midsize Sante Fe Sport
Large Crossover:
1. Ford Explorer 216,294*
2. Toyota Highlander - 191,379
3. Honda Pilot - 120,772
4. Chevrolet Traverse - 116,701
5. GMC Acadia - 88,466
6. Nissan Pathfinder - 81,701
7. Dodge Durango - 68,474
8. Buick Enclave - 52,028
9. Ford Police Interceptor Utility - 32,213*
10. Ford Flex - 22,668
11. Mazda CX-9 - 16,051
*Combined Ford Explorer and Interceptor Utility - 248,507
Large truck-based:
1. Chevrolet Tahoe - 103,306*
2. Chevrolet Suburban - 60,082*
3. Ford Expedition - 59,835
4. GMC Yukon - 53,447^
5. GMC Yukon XL - 37,054^
6. Nissan Armada - 14,035
7. Toyota Sequoia - 12,771
*Combined Chevrolet Tahoe and Suburban sales - 163,388
^Combined GMC Yukon and Yukon XL sales - 90,501, placing them in 2nd place.
Luxury SUVs and Crossovers-
Subcompact:
1. BMW X1 - 27,812
2. Mercedes-Benz GLA - 24,545
3. Audi Q3 - 20,048
4. Infiniti QX30 - 2,259
Compact:
1. Lexus NX - 54,884
2. Acura RDX - 52,361
3. Audi Q5 - 49,550
4. Mercedes-Benz GLC/GLK - 47,872
5. BMW X3 - 44,196
6. Cadillac XT5 - 39,485
7. Lincoln MKC - 25,562
8. Cadillac SRX - 22,139
9. Volvo XC60 - 20,452
10. Porsche Macan - 19,332
11. Infiniti QX50 - 16,973
12. Land Rover Discovery Sport - 14,243
13. Jaguar F-Pace - 10,016
14. BMW X4 - 4,989
Evoque sales not provided in press release
Midsize:
1. Lexus RX - 109,435
2. Acura MDX - 55,495
3. Mercedes-Benz GLE/M - 51,791
4. BMW X5 - 47,641
5. Volvo XC90 - 32,526
6. Lincoln MKX - 30,967
7. Lexus GX - 25,148
8. Land Rover Range Rover Sport - 21,612
9. Porsche Cayenne - 15,383
10. Land Rover LR4 - 10,772
11. BMW X6 - 7,117
12. Infiniti QX70 - 6,261
13. VW Touareg - 4,223
Large:
1. Infiniti QX60 - 42,120
2. Audi Q7 - 30,563
3. Mercedes-Benz GLS/GL - 30,442
4. Cadillac Escalade - 23,604*
5. Infiniti QX80 - 16,772
6. Cadillac Escalade ESV - 15,488*
7. Lincoln Navigator - 10,421
8. Lexus LX - 5,707
9. Lincoln MKT - 4,028
10. Mercedes-Benz G-Class - 3,950
11. Toyota Land Cruiser - 3,705
Combined Cadillac Escalade and ESV sales - 39,092, placing them in 2nd place.
Land Rover Range Rover sales not provided in press release
Pickups and Vans-
Midsize Pickups:
1. Toyota Tacoma - 191,631
2. Chevrolet Colorado - 108,725
3. Nissan Frontier - 86,926
4. GMC Canyon - 37,449
5. Honda Ridgeline - 23,667
Fullsize Pickups:
1. Ford F-Series - 820,799
2. Chevrolet Silverado - 574,876
3. Ram Pickup - 489,418
4. GMC Sierra - 221,680
5. Toyota Tundra - 115,489
6. Nissan Titan - 21,880
Compact Vans:
1. Ford Transit Connect - 43,232
2. Nissan NV200 - 18,523
3. Ram ProMaster City - 15,972
4. Mazda 5 - 375
Minivans:
1. Toyota Sienna - 127,791
2. Dodge Caravan - 127,678
3. Honda Odyssey - 120,846
4. Chrysler Pacifica - 62,366
5. Chrysler Town & Country - 59,071
6. Kia Sedona - 44,264
7. Nissan Quest - 11,115
8. Ram Cargo Van - 21
Fullsize Vans:
1. Ford Transit - 143,244
2. Chevrolet Express - 68,007
3. Ford E-Series - 54,245
4. Mercedes-Benz Vans - 43,304 (further breakdown between Sprinter and Metris not available)
5. Ram ProMaster Van - 40,440
6. GMC Savanna - 20,607
7. Nissan NV - 17,873
Other:
1. Ford Heavy Trucks - 15,486
2. Chevrolet Commercial Trucks - 7,019
Cars-
City/minicars:
1. Chevrolet Spark - 35,511
2. Fiat 500 - 15,437
3. smart - 6,211
4. Mitsubishi i-MiEV - 94
5. Scion iQ - 6
Subcompacts:
1. Kia Soul - 145,768
2. Nissan Versa - 132,214
3. Hyundai Accent - 79,766
4. Honda Fit - 56,630
5. Chevrolet Sonic - 55,255
6. Ford Fiesta - 48,807
7. MINI (all models except Countryman) - 39,324
8. Toyota Yaris - 38,855
9. Kia Rio - 28,700
10. Mitsubishi Mirage - 22,226
11. VW Beetle - 15,667
12. Nissan Leaf - 14,006
13. Fiat 500L - 3,118
14. Scion xB - 2,677
15. Chevrolet Bolt - 579
16. Nissan Cube - 15
17. Scion xD - 9
18. Mazda 2 - 3
Compacts:
1. Toyota Corolla - 378,210
2. Honda Civic - 366,927
3. Nissan Sentra - 214,709
4. Hyundai Elantra - 208,319
5. Chevrolet Cruze - 188,876
6. Ford Focus - 168,789
7. VW Jetta - 121,107
8. Kia Forte - 103,292
9. Subaru Crosstrek - 95,677*
10. Mazda 3 - 95,567
11. VW Golf - 61,687
12. Subaru Impreza - 55,238*
13. Dodge Dart - 43,402
14. Subaru WRX/STI - 33,279*
15. Buick Verano - 30,277
16. Chevrolet Volt - 24,739
17. Ford C-Max - 19,834
18. Mitsubishi Lancer - 14,304
19. Toyota Mirai - 1,034
20. Honda Insight - 67
21. Honda Clarity FCV - 8
*Combined Subaru Impreza, WRX/STI, and Crosstrek sales - 184,194, placing them at 6th place
Midsize:
1. Toyota Camry - 388,618
2. Honda Accord - 345,225
3. Nissan Altima - 307,380
4. Ford Fusion - 265,840
5. Chevrolet Malibu - 227,881
6. Hyundai Sonata - 199,416
7. Subaru Outback - 182,898*
8. Toyota Prius - 136,632
9. Kia Optima - 124,203
10. VW Passat - 73,002
11. Subaru Legacy - 65,306*
12. Chrysler 200 - 57,294
13. Mazda 6 - 45,520
14. Buick Regal - 19,833
15. VW CC - 3,237
16. Dodge Avenger - 45
*Combined Subaru Legacy and Outback sales - 248,204, placing them at 5th place.
Fullsize:
1. Chevrolet Impala - 97,006
2. Dodge Charger - 95,437
3. Nissan Maxima - 62,670^
4. Chrysler 300 - 53,241
5. Toyota Avalon - 48,080
6. Ford Taurus - 34,626*
7. Buick LaCrosse - 27,582
8. Ford Police Interceptor - 9,472*
9. Hyundai Azera - 4,942
10. Kia Cadenza - 4,738
11. Chevrolet SS - 3,013
12. Chevrolet Caprice - 1,021
*Combined Ford Taurus and Interceptor - 44,098
^Yes, I know the Maxima walks a delicate line between mainstream fullsize and premium midsize
Sporty coupes and convertibles
1. Ford Mustang - 105,932
2. Chevrolet Camaro - 72,705
3. Dodge Challenger - 64,433
4. Hyundai Veloster - 30,053
5. Scion tC - 9,336
6. Buick Cascada - 7,153
7. VW Eos - 387
Hyundai Genesis coupe sales not provided
Sports cars and roadsters:
1. Chevrolet Corvette - 29,995
2. Mazda MX-5 Miata - 9,465
3. Porsche 911 - 8,901
4. Toyota 86/Scion FR-S - 7,457
5. Porsche Boxster/Cayman - 6,260
6. Nissan 370Z - 5,913
7. Subaru BRZ - 4,141
8. Mercedes-Benz SL - 3,722
9. Mercedes-Benz SLC/SLK - 3,397
10. Audi TT - 3,044
11. Fiat Spider - 2,475
12. Honda CR-Z - 2,338
13. BMW i8 - 1,594
14. Mercedes-Benz AMG GT - 1,227
15. BMW Z4 - 1,187
16. Audi R8 - 736
17. Nissan GT-R - 698
18. Dodge Viper - 630
SUVs and Crossovers-
Subcompact:
1. Jeep Renegade - 106,606
2. Honda HR-V - 82,041
3. Chevrolet Trax - 79,016
4. Buick Encore - 78,565
5. Mitsubishi Outlander Sport - 33,067
6. Nissan Juke - 19,577
7. Mazda CX-3 - 18,557
8. MINI Countryman - 12,706
9. Fiat 500X - 11,712
Compact:
1. Honda CR-V - 357,335
2. Toyota RAV4 - 352,154
3. Nissan Rogue - 329,904
4. Ford Escape - 307,069
5. Chevrolet Equinox - 242,195
6. Jeep Cherokee - 199,736
7. Jeep Wrangler - 191,774
8. Subaru Forester - 178,593
9. Jeep Patriot - 121,926*
10. Mazda CX-5 - 112,235
11. Jeep Compass - 94,061
12. Hyundai Tucson - 89,713
13. GMC Terrain - 87,925
14. Kia Sportage - 81,066
15. VW Tiguan - 43,638
16. Mitsubishi Outlander - 26,576
17. Buick Envision - 14,193
*Production of the Patriot ended in December, 2017 models are available
Midsize:
1. Jeep Grand Cherokee - 212,273
2. Ford Edge - 134,588
3. Hyundai Santa Fe - 131,257*
4. Kia Sorento - 114,733
5. Toyota 4Runner - 111,970
6. Dodge Journey - 106,759
7. Nissan Murano - 86,953
8. Honda Crosstour - 726
9. Toyota Venza - 589
10. Nissan Xterra - 38
11. Toyota FJ Cruiser - 9
*No breakdown provided between large Sante Fe and midsize Sante Fe Sport
Large Crossover:
1. Ford Explorer 216,294*
2. Toyota Highlander - 191,379
3. Honda Pilot - 120,772
4. Chevrolet Traverse - 116,701
5. GMC Acadia - 88,466
6. Nissan Pathfinder - 81,701
7. Dodge Durango - 68,474
8. Buick Enclave - 52,028
9. Ford Police Interceptor Utility - 32,213*
10. Ford Flex - 22,668
11. Mazda CX-9 - 16,051
*Combined Ford Explorer and Interceptor Utility - 248,507
Large truck-based:
1. Chevrolet Tahoe - 103,306*
2. Chevrolet Suburban - 60,082*
3. Ford Expedition - 59,835
4. GMC Yukon - 53,447^
5. GMC Yukon XL - 37,054^
6. Nissan Armada - 14,035
7. Toyota Sequoia - 12,771
*Combined Chevrolet Tahoe and Suburban sales - 163,388
^Combined GMC Yukon and Yukon XL sales - 90,501, placing them in 2nd place.
Luxury SUVs and Crossovers-
Subcompact:
1. BMW X1 - 27,812
2. Mercedes-Benz GLA - 24,545
3. Audi Q3 - 20,048
4. Infiniti QX30 - 2,259
Compact:
1. Lexus NX - 54,884
2. Acura RDX - 52,361
3. Audi Q5 - 49,550
4. Mercedes-Benz GLC/GLK - 47,872
5. BMW X3 - 44,196
6. Cadillac XT5 - 39,485
7. Lincoln MKC - 25,562
8. Cadillac SRX - 22,139
9. Volvo XC60 - 20,452
10. Porsche Macan - 19,332
11. Infiniti QX50 - 16,973
12. Land Rover Discovery Sport - 14,243
13. Jaguar F-Pace - 10,016
14. BMW X4 - 4,989
Evoque sales not provided in press release
Midsize:
1. Lexus RX - 109,435
2. Acura MDX - 55,495
3. Mercedes-Benz GLE/M - 51,791
4. BMW X5 - 47,641
5. Volvo XC90 - 32,526
6. Lincoln MKX - 30,967
7. Lexus GX - 25,148
8. Land Rover Range Rover Sport - 21,612
9. Porsche Cayenne - 15,383
10. Land Rover LR4 - 10,772
11. BMW X6 - 7,117
12. Infiniti QX70 - 6,261
13. VW Touareg - 4,223
Large:
1. Infiniti QX60 - 42,120
2. Audi Q7 - 30,563
3. Mercedes-Benz GLS/GL - 30,442
4. Cadillac Escalade - 23,604*
5. Infiniti QX80 - 16,772
6. Cadillac Escalade ESV - 15,488*
7. Lincoln Navigator - 10,421
8. Lexus LX - 5,707
9. Lincoln MKT - 4,028
10. Mercedes-Benz G-Class - 3,950
11. Toyota Land Cruiser - 3,705
Combined Cadillac Escalade and ESV sales - 39,092, placing them in 2nd place.
Land Rover Range Rover sales not provided in press release
Pickups and Vans-
Midsize Pickups:
1. Toyota Tacoma - 191,631
2. Chevrolet Colorado - 108,725
3. Nissan Frontier - 86,926
4. GMC Canyon - 37,449
5. Honda Ridgeline - 23,667
Fullsize Pickups:
1. Ford F-Series - 820,799
2. Chevrolet Silverado - 574,876
3. Ram Pickup - 489,418
4. GMC Sierra - 221,680
5. Toyota Tundra - 115,489
6. Nissan Titan - 21,880
Compact Vans:
1. Ford Transit Connect - 43,232
2. Nissan NV200 - 18,523
3. Ram ProMaster City - 15,972
4. Mazda 5 - 375
Minivans:
1. Toyota Sienna - 127,791
2. Dodge Caravan - 127,678
3. Honda Odyssey - 120,846
4. Chrysler Pacifica - 62,366
5. Chrysler Town & Country - 59,071
6. Kia Sedona - 44,264
7. Nissan Quest - 11,115
8. Ram Cargo Van - 21
Fullsize Vans:
1. Ford Transit - 143,244
2. Chevrolet Express - 68,007
3. Ford E-Series - 54,245
4. Mercedes-Benz Vans - 43,304 (further breakdown between Sprinter and Metris not available)
5. Ram ProMaster Van - 40,440
6. GMC Savanna - 20,607
7. Nissan NV - 17,873
Other:
1. Ford Heavy Trucks - 15,486
2. Chevrolet Commercial Trucks - 7,019