- Tesla: $7,166 decrease ($62,272 to $55,106)
- Land Rover: $6,882 decrease ($106,834 to $99,952)
- Lincoln: $3,038 decrease ($68,274 to $65,236)
- Volvo: $2,718 decrease ($59,825 to $57,107)
- Mercedes-Benz: $2,233 decrease ($84,874 to $82,641)
- Fiat: $2,201 decrease ($32,730 to $30,529)
- Volkswagen: $1,934 decrease ($39,473 to $37,539)
- Buick: $1,594 decrease ($39,224 to $37,630)
- Polestar: $1,558 decrease ($64,057 to $62,499)
- Nissan: $1,244 decrease ($36,635 to $35,391)
The Car Market Just Flipped — 10 Massive Price Drops
In a surprising turn of events, the auto market is finally offering relief to consumers after a year of supply shortages and soaring new car prices. In the past six months, average new vehicle prices saw their largest January-to-July drop in a decade — completely flipping the car market.
The average price for a new vehicle in July was $44,700, a massive flip of $3,243 compared to the price in January, as reported by Kelley Blue Book. Prices have fallen by 1.7% since the start of the year, marking the first significant decline in car prices since supply shortages began affecting the industry in 2021.
Michelle Krebs, an executive analyst at Kelley Blue Book’s parent company, Cox Automotive, described the previous year’s scenario as “inflation gone wild,” with consistent transaction price increases of 10% to 12% year over year. This price surge was primarily driven by low inventory levels.
Recent price decreases are attributed to a recovery in the supply of new vehicles and high auto loan rates suppressing demand. According to Cox, new vehicle inventory increased from 1.75 million in January to 1.95 million at the end of June.
Among the brands that experienced the most significant price drops from January to July were: