It wasn't that Canadians were buying fewer new vehicles - they were actually buying more; nearly 39,000 more in 2007. But this group of eight SUVs only accounted for 0.8% of the 1.65 million new vehicles sold.
GM's control of the category was growing in strength, however, rising to 55.3% from 48.4% in 2006. The Ford Expedition was technically the category's top seller, but the Tahoe and Yukon alone combined to outsell the Ford by nearly a two-to-one ratio.
You can click any model name in the tables below to find historical monthly and yearly U.S. auto sales data. You can also select a make and model at GCBC's Sales Stats page. This table is sortable, so you can rank large sport-utility vehicles any which way you like.
Click Column Headers To Sort • 2008 Year End • 2006 Year End
SUV | 2007 | 2006 | % Change |
---|---|---|---|
1460 | 1246 | 17.2% | |
2211 | 1879 | 17.7% | |
1535 | 383 | 301% | |
1634 | 3836 | -57.4% | |
2217 | 2528 | -12.3% | |
2197 | 2443 | -10.1% | |
1218 | 1316 | -7.4% | |
153 | 219 | -30.1% | |
195 | 377 | -48.3% | |
--- | --- | --- | --- |
Total | 12,820 | 14,227 | -9.9% |
RECOMMENDED READING
Large SUV Sales In Canada - 2006 Year End
Large SUV Sales In Canada - 2008 Year End