Average age of cars and light trucks in U.S. hits 11.8 years

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July 11, 2019 by Allan Janssen
[h=1]Average age of cars and light trucks in U.S. hits 11.8 years[/h]
The average age of light vehicles in operation (VIO) in the U.S. has risen again this year to 11.8 years, according to new research from IHS Markit.By comparison, the average age of Canadian light vehicles was 9.6 years in 2015.The acceleration of average age in the U.S. can easily be seen when looking across the last 17 years. From 2002 to 2007, the average age of light vehicles in the U.S. increased by 3.5 percent. From 2008 to 2013, however, the increase was 12.2 percent.Over the last five years, the average age increase has returned to its more traditional rate – aging by 4 percent over this time period.“Better technology and overall vehicle quality improvements continue to be key drivers of the rising average vehicle age over time,” said Mark Seng, director, global automotive aftermarket practice at IHS Markit. “The 40 percent drop in new vehicle sales due to the recession created an acceleration in average age like we’ve never seen before. In the last couple of years, however, average age has returned to its more traditional rate of increase.”Light vehicles in operation in the U.S. have now reached a record level of more than 278 million according to the analysis – an increase of more than 5.9 million (2.2 percent) since 2018. This represents one of the highest annual increases the U.S. auto industry has seen since IHS Markit began tracking VIO growth – second only to the 2.3 percent growth in 2016.“The increasing VIO fleet is providing a robust new business pipeline for the aftermarket,” said Seng. “A larger fleet means more service and repair opportunities in the future.”Light vehicles are not aging consistently across geography or segment.For the first time the analysis included a review of various regions around the country. The oldest light vehicles are found in the West at 12.4 years, while the youngest are found in the Northeast at 10.9 years. In addition, the light vehicle fleet is not aging at the same rate across regions.In the West, light vehicles increased 1.5 percent from 2018-2019 while in the Midwest they aged by just 0.4 percent. The state of Montana has the oldest average age with light vehicles averaging 16.6 years. The youngest average age is in Vermont, where the average age of light vehicles is 9.9 years.Because of the growth in popularity of light trucks – including CUVs/SUVs – vehicle age in the U.S. is also increasing at different rates across vehicle segments. From 2018-2019, the average age of passenger cars increased 2.2 percent while light trucks aged at a rate of just 0.1 percent.The average age growth of the vehicle fleet will bring new opportunities for the automotive aftermarket, according to the analysis. The shift among various age categories continues to be a closely-monitored measure, as it is important to those who manage inventories of required parts and plan for sales and service activity accordingly.

According to IHS Markit, the shifting dynamic of the age of vehicles in operation indicates the volumes of vehicles in the new to five-year old category will grow 2 percent from 2018-2023, while vehicles in the 6 to 11 year old range will grow 27 percent. This is a very positive trend for the independent aftermarket as it points to a growing repair “sweet spot” – or growth in the vehicles which drive the most repair opportunities. In contrast, vehicles 12-15 years old will decline 27 percent over the same time period.
“While the decrease in light vehicles 12-15 years of age looks alarming, it relates to the drop in sales due to the recession,” said Seng. “There is simply a lack of 2008 and 2009 model year vehicles due to the lower sales numbers during that timeframe. Even the model years from early in the recovery are lower in number. This disruption simply needs time to work its way through the fleet.”
For the aftermarket repair industry, however, there is also a positive trend with the oldest light vehicles on the road. These older cars and light trucks are growing very fast – with vehicles 16 years and older expected to grow 22 percent from 2018-2023 reaching 84 million units in 2023. In contrast, there were less than 35 million of 16-plus year old vehicles on the road in 2002.
This aging fleet is a great trend for aftermarket companies focused on repairing the vehicles on the road today and into the future. However, the industry must understand how the trend will impact those service opportunities. Rather than selling to the first or second owner of the vehicle, it might be a third, fourth or fifth owner. Branding and pricing strategies for good, better and best products and services will become more important as the consumers will decide how much they are willing to pay for a needed repair based on the age of their vehicle.
 

ATV Rancher

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A couple of days ago I asked the guy the delivers FedEx how the 6.0 gas Chevy that he had in a 3/4 T van did, since I have 3 6L gas pickups. He traded that van for a 1/2 T, but said it ran up to a half million miles with just oil changes and basic maintenance, but that it went through 3 transmissions to get there.
 

luvz da mud

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A couple of days ago I asked the guy the delivers FedEx how the 6.0 gas Chevy that he had in a 3/4 T van did, since I have 3 6L gas pickups. He traded that van for a 1/2 T, but said it ran up to a half million miles with just oil changes and basic maintenance, but that it went through 3 transmissions to get there.

I had an S-10 Blazer I got to 530,000K with a set of head gaskets and usual consumables and sold it to a buddy who is still driving it and that was only a 4.3

Getting half a mill out of a V8 truck shouldn't be too difficult with basic and routine maintenance.

https://autoweek.com/article/car-life/legendary-million-mile-truck

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iSunY_w957Q
 

papajake

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Sold my 2007 chev cobalt to a young teen for 1000 had 425000 klms didn’t burn oil still had lots of power had one of the worst suspensions I have ever owned in a car kid is still driving it has rusted quarter panels
 

ATV Rancher

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Transmission just started to take a crap on one of the 6.0s with ~26000 miles. One with 90000 miles seems bulletproof. Hope I don't jinx it. Another one is on tranny number 2 but it's one that the tranny cooler collapsed internally. It's not the only one I've heard of that's done that, but it's older and abused.
 

ATV Rancher

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Transmission just started to take a crap on one of the 6.0s with ~26000 miles. One with 90000 miles seems bulletproof. Hope I don't jinx it. Another one is on tranny number 2 but it's one that the tranny cooler collapsed internally. It's not the only one I've heard of that's done that, but it's older and abused.
Transmission is okay, but this one has no gas cap........so the gas tank has got a bunch of sh*t in it and the fuel pump is taking a crap. It's under warranty, and the dealer is going to change the filler so it gets a cap, besides clean the tank out and replace the fuel pump assembly. Who comes up with some of these "improvements"?
 

Staple_STI

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I commute with a 2002 Honda Accord (5 speed), thing runs like a top with 265000. Will drive it to the ground, just worried I will be driving it for another 10 years.
 

moyiesledhead

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2004 Dodge Cummins 3500 - 435000km
2000 VW Jetta TDI - 440000km
2002 VW Beetle TDI - 199000km
2002 Jeep Grand Cherokee - 305000km

Nothing new in my plans either.
 

ATV Rancher

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Transmission is okay, but this one has no gas cap........so the gas tank has got a bunch of sh*t in it and the fuel pump is taking a crap. It's under warranty, and the dealer is going to change the filler so it gets a cap, besides clean the tank out and replace the fuel pump assembly. Who comes up with some of these "improvements"?
So that was July 29, just got it back two days ago. Fuel pump was backordered and gawd forbid they use aftermarket.
 
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