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SUVs versus cars: The rise and fall of Australia’s most popular new vehicle types over the last decade

The Australian new car market hit a record 1,241,037 deliveries in 2025, but the total only tells a small part of the story.

Over the past 11 years, overall market growth has been modest – up 85,629 units or 7.4 percent compared to 2015. The real change has been within the overall market as demand shifted away from traditional passenger vehicles towards SUVs and, to a lesser extent, light commercial vehicles.

In 2015, cars were still the backbone of the market. They accounted for 515,683 deliveries or 44.6 percent of all new vehicles sold this year. Although SUVs were already popular, they lagged behind with 408,471 deliveries and a share of 35.4 percent.

Light commercial vehicles (vans and vans) accounted for 199,070 sales (17.2 percent), while heavy commercial vehicles accounted for only 2.8 percent of the market.

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By 2025, this hierarchy will have been completely rewritten.

Car deliveries fell to 164,847, meaning their market share shrank to 13.3 percent. SUVs rose to 757,697 deliveries and achieved a share of 61.1 percent. Light commercial vehicles rose to 273,229 (share 22.0 percent), heavy commercial vehicles grew to 45,264 (3.6 percent).

The scale of change is enormous. Between 2015 and 2025, passenger cars lost 350,836 annual sales (minus 68.0 percent). In the same period, 349,226 SUVs were sold (plus 85.5 percent). The difference between these two numbers is only 1,610 vehicles, which shows that almost all of the decline in car demand has been absorbed by SUVs and has not completely disappeared from the market.

The transition was not instantaneous, but the data shows several clear turning points.

  • 2017 is the crossover year in which SUVs (465,646) were sold more than cars (450,012) for the first time.
  • 2021 is the year in which SUVs will take over the majority of the market for the first time with a share of 50.6 percent
  • In 2022, passenger cars fell below a 20 percent market share – a threshold from which they have not recovered since

Even the sharp decline in overall sales in 2020, when the market fell to 916,968 deliveries, failed to reverse the trend. Passenger cars fell to 222,103 sales this year, while SUVs still recorded 454,701 deliveries and were already approaching a majority share. When volumes recovered in the years after the Corona crisis, growth flowed almost exclusively into SUVs and light commercial vehicles, not back into passenger cars.

The Ford Ranger has been Australia’s most popular new vehicle for the past three years.