Looking at the sales data automakers release monthly or quarterly can lead some automotive news reporters to make incorrect assumptions. While truck sales with the Ford F-Series at the forefront are always impressive and can top many news stories, trucks are purchased by municipalities, fleets, and contractors in huge percentages. While trucks are of course the family vehicle for many, the overall sales numbers give an exaggerated view of what most regular Americans purchase and drive as their family vehicle.
iSeeCars Sales Data
iSeeCars.com recently conducted a study showing the top vehicle sold in each state. The Ford F-Series dominates both new and used vehicle sales. However, what is the result if trucks are removed from the count? We asked iSeeCars if they would crunch the numbers again and they agreed without hesitation.
After Trucks, Crossovers Now Dominate
With Trucks removed from the data, two trends became clear to us. First, crossovers now dominate both new and used vehicle sales. With regard to new vehicle sales, crossovers are the top models in 42 of our fifty states. Almost every top-seller among those crossovers is a vehicle in the size category most commonly called "compact." The size is defined by the Honda CR-V. Almost none that top a state for sales are smaller or larger. The Chevy Trax and the Jeep Renegade are the two exceptions.
Related Story: You Love The CR-V More Than Any Honda Model In Long-Term One-Owner Satisfaction
Nissan's Altima Is A Used Car Darling
On the used vehicle sales side, crossovers also dominate, but the shift away from cars is clear. Among used vehicle sales, crossovers are the top-selling vehicles in 31 states with sedans topping sales in 19. Here is a very interesting tidbit. The Accord and Camry are not the cars that top most states' used car sales. The Nissan Altima is, it being the number one non-truck used vehicle sold in 15 states. Didn't see that one coming.
Honda's CR-V Is Leading
The second takeaway we have from our analysis of the data is the Honda CR-V is simply kicking butt. Among non-truck new vehicle sales, the iSeeCars data shows the CR-V as being the top-selling vehicle in 16 states. The number two vehicle is the Chevy Equinox which tops sales in 9 states. The RAV4 only tops the sales in 4. However, note that the RAV4 is VERY strong when it it does top those states. In Massachusetts for example, the RAV4 is the top vehicle overall, even topping the Ford F-150.
Related Story: Honda Drops Specs On 2020 CR-V AWD Hybrid - RAV4 Hybrid Now Has Company
We know from multiple sources of data two things. Trucks remain strong among top-level sales. And second, crossovers are becoming the non-truck default vehicle in America, led by the impressive Honda CR-V.
John Gorehamis a life-long car nut and recovering engineer. John's focus areas are technology, safety, and green vehicles. In the 1990s, he was part of a team that built a solar-electric vehicle from scratch. His was the role of battery thermal control designer. For 20 years he applied his engineering and sales talents in the high tech world and published numerous articles in technical journals such as Chemical Processing Magazine. In 2008 he retired from that career and dedicated himself to chasing his dream of being an auto writer. In addition to Torque News, John's work has appeared in print in dozens of American newspapers and he provides reviews to many vehicle shopping sites. You can follow John on Twitter, and connect with him at Linkedin.