Wednesday, January 5, 2011

New Vehicle Market Share By Brand In America - 2010 Year End

With over 2.2 million new vehicle sales, General Motors was America's largest-volume automaker in 2010. Nearly one of out every five vehicles sold was a GM product. Ford Motor Company sold more than 1.9 million vehicles. Toyota Motor Corporation sold more than 1.76 million vehicles. Hyundai and Kia inched close to 900,000 total sales.

Twelve conglomerates controlled more than 98% of the new vehicle market in the United States. Approximately 45% of the market was Detroit-based: GM, Ford Motor Company, or Chrysler/Dodge/Jeep. Quick to point out that Subaru is now a mainstream manufacturer, The Good Car Guy acknowledges through this pie chart that Subaru only held 2.3% of the U.S. market in 2010, perhaps not as mainstream as the company's 263,820 sales make it sound.

As for the Germans, Volkswagen's vast empire only accounts for 3.3% of the U.S. new car market. BMW's market share is a few ticks above 2%, Mercedes-Benz, Maybach, and smart are behind BMW's control, a fate which is truly smart's fault; and to Mini's credit.


Related From GoodCarBadCar.net
U.S. Auto Brand Market Share Charts - December 2011 And 2011 Year End
U.S. New Vehicle Market Share By Brand - January 2011
U.S. Auto Sales By Brand - 2010 Year End
New Vehicle Market Share By Brand In America - November 2010
Canadian New Vehicle Market Share By Brand - 2010 Year End
New Vehicle Market Share By Brand In The UK - 2010 Year End

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