Updated
Updated · CarScoops · Jul 7
Automakers Drop Cheap New Cars, Pushing Average Transaction Prices Near $50,000
Updated
Updated · CarScoops · Jul 7

Automakers Drop Cheap New Cars, Pushing Average Transaction Prices Near $50,000

3 articles · Updated · CarScoops · Jul 7

Summary

  • $50,000 average new-vehicle transaction prices now reflect not just inflation but a market with far fewer genuinely inexpensive models than a decade ago.
  • Cox Automotive argues affordability is being crushed by higher housing, insurance, grocery and borrowing costs, even as modern cars deliver more safety, tech and capability for the money.
  • Missing from that case is the industry's retreat from entry-level cars such as the Honda Fit, Chevrolet Spark and Ford Fiesta, which once gave buyers lower-cost options.
  • Even where base trims still exist, dealers often stock better-equipped versions in smaller affordable volumes, blurring whether consumers are choosing pricier vehicles or being steered toward them.
  • The result is an affordability debate that reaches beyond sticker prices but still leaves automakers partly responsible for moving the U.S. new-car market upscale.

Insights

Are advanced safety features and tech upgrades making new cars an unaffordable luxury for most Americans?
With affordable models nearly extinct, did automakers intentionally abandon middle-class buyers for higher profits?
As car payments hit record highs, is the used car lot the only option left for the average family?