auto dealer in black and red logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

New and Used Car Prices Continue Upward Climb

The average price of a new car hit $45,000 in September and reached $25,000 for the average used car, according to Kelley Blue Book.

November 2, 2021
New and Used Car Prices Continue Upward Climb

 

Credit:

Flickr

4 min to read


 

 

The average price of a new car hit $45,000 in September and reached $25,000 for the average used car, according to Kelley Blue Book.

Prices for high-end luxury cars and high-end, full-size SUVs exceeded $100,000. 

New car prices increased $4,872 or 12.1% in the past year, while used car prices are up more than $5,000 vs. a year ago, reported Charlie Chesbrough, senior economist for Cox Automotive, in a webinar hosted by the American International Automobile Dealers Association.

The one month jump new car prices was $1,613, or 3.7% from August to September, said Kayla Reynolds, an analyst for Cox Automotive, parent company of Kelly Blue Book. October figures will be reported by mid-November.

Further, the average new-vehicle transaction price has hit record levels (month over previous month) for six consecutive months, reported Kelley Blue Book, which tracks market values for new and used vehicles.

Experts blame short supply and high demand as the main reasons for price increases. The ongoing semiconductor chip shortage continues to tighten new vehicle supply. Pandemic shutdowns also impacted supply.

Available supply of new vehicles was down 73% by summer’s end, or around 2.5 million vehicles (that weren’t built and sent to dealers), vs. pre-Covid 2019 days, according to Cox Automotive.

The market for used cars and trucks also has experienced an inventory shortage, which has also driven prices up.

Companies that run the wholesale, dealer-only auctions where dealers purchase much of their used inventory complain that volume is down from their biggest sources of used vehicles: customer trade-ins, lease returns, repossessions, and former daily rent-a-cars.

Customers can’t find the cars and trucks they want so they are not trading in their vehicles. Shoppers are postponing purchases in response to high prices. Lease returns are down as customers instead buy their leased vehicles instead of turning them in. The residual values stated on lease documents is typically thousands of dollars less than its actual value.  

Repos also are down. During the pandemic, many lenders observed a moratorium on repossessions. Rental returns to auction houses are falling, because people traveled less during the pandemic and factories diverted new cars and trucks to retail customers instead of rental fleets.

While used-vehicle prices remain higher than a year ago, values hit a plateau on the wholesale market over the summer, according to auction firm KAR Global. Those values ticked up again in September and October.

In September, KAR Global reported the average used-vehicle price at a wholesale auction was up 20.3% since September 2019 to $15,546.

Prices are also increasing for three-year-old used cars, which are often reconditioned, given a factory-backed warranty, and resold at a premium at dealerships, as certified pre-owned cars (CPO). Prices of used midsize sedans fitting the CPO profile rose 27% in the past year and 39% over two years, reported Tom Kontos, chief economist for KAR Global. For midsize SUVs or crossovers that become CPO vehicles, wholesale prices increased 31% and 34% over the past one and two years, respectively.

For both new and used, the high demand is partly pent-up demand after pandemic shutdowns. COVID concerns also made people less likely to choose public transportation or ride sharing. U.S. households also have higher than normal high savings, reported Chesbrough.

Automakers have cut back on new-vehicle discounts. Kelly Blue Book said incentives as a percent of average transaction price fell to 5.6% in August, down from what was a 10-year low of 5.9% in July, and down from 10.1% in August 2020.  

Some new-car segments saw price increases over the 12.1% average increase versus a year ago. Van prices were up 16.4%; hybrid/alternative energy (but not EVs) cars and mid-size cars, were both up 15.1%; and high-end luxury cars increased 14.4%. The average selling price of a high-end luxury car hit $119,312 in September, of a high-end luxury full-size SUV/crossover $102,191.

Categories that saw the lowest price increases versus a year ago were full-size (mainstream) SUV/crossovers, up just 2.3%; electric cars, up 3.5%; and subcompact cars, up 5%.

Individual brands with big September 2021 price increases over 2020 were Cadillac, up 51.2%; Genesis up 29.7%; and Mercedes-Benz, up 25.8%.  

More Dealer Ops

Dealer Opsby StaffSeptember 8, 2025

Cox Automotive Acquires Inspection Firm

Full ownership of Alliance Inspection Management, or AiM, meant to unlock growth for Manheim inspection capabilities

Read More →
Dealer Opsby StaffAugust 26, 2025

Assurant Expands Partnership With Holman

Extended collaboration delivers training, products and performance development to 30 newly acquired Holman dealerships

Read More →
Dealer Opsby Hannah MitchellAugust 26, 2025

Franchises, Throughput Down in First Half

A handful of states see franchise growth through June, while EV sales per store boost overall business in U.S.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
SalesAugust 25, 2025

How to Build a High-Performance Sales and F&I Team

Performance and profits start with people chosen and led the right way.

Read More →
Dealer Opsby Hannah MitchellAugust 19, 2025

Buy-Sells Up in Q2

Kerrigan metrics show there’s plenty of demand, though many sellers are waiting to pull the trigger.

Read More →
Graphic for July 15, 2025 webinar “Driving Directions to Your Secure Auto Destination,” listing vehicle theft, vandalism, insurance losses, and other security risks with a laptop meeting image.
Dealer Opsby StaffAugust 14, 2025

Webinar Gives Driving Directions for Vehicle Security

Free on-demand session shares solutions for securing vehicle storage and parking facilities.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Dealer Opsby Hannah MitchellAugust 7, 2025

Own Your Missteps

We all mess up from time to time, but it’s how we address the mistakes that really matters.

Read More →
Jennifer Rappaport, CEO of EFG Companies, stands in a conference room wearing a bright pink suit, with the EFG logo visible on the wall behind her.
Dealer Opsby StaffAugust 1, 2025

Top Questions From Dealers Reflect State of Industry

EFG Cos. says challenging times demand sound counsel during second half of 2025.

Read More →
Dealer Opsby StaffJune 18, 2025

TSD Mobility, Canopy Connect Partner to Ease Insurance Verification

The new integration is intended to bring streamlined functionality to rental agents and dealerships.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
F&Iby StaffApril 2, 2025

DOWC Powers the Future of F&I for NESNA

Company is providing a fully integrated F&I administration model to Nissan Extended Services North America’s dealer network.

Read More →