U.S. New Car Prices Hit $51,974, Up 65.5% Since 1970 as Trucks and SUVs Dominate
Updated
Updated · Jalopnik · Jul 10
U.S. New Car Prices Hit $51,974, Up 65.5% Since 1970 as Trucks and SUVs Dominate
1 articles · Updated · Jalopnik · Jul 10
Summary
$51,974 was the average U.S. new-car price last week, the first sustained move above $50,000 and 65.5% higher than 1970 in inflation-adjusted terms.
$83,730 in median household income now buys less car: the average sticker equals 62% of annual income, up from 42% in 1975.
Trucks and SUVs drove much of that gap as the market mix flipped from 60% cars and wagons in 1995 to just 31% by 2020, while larger vehicles also became pricier than sedans.
36.5% of buyers this spring took loans of 73 months or longer, and a record 23.9% signed seven-year loans, underscoring how higher prices are stretching affordability.
$27,590 compact cars remain a relative escape hatch: their prices rose just 1% from a year earlier, and a 20% down payment would be about $5,518.