Canadians registered 18,567 of these vehicles in 2004, but in 2009 this group of ten accounted for just 0.5% of the new vehicles sold in Canada. GM owned 52.5% of the segment, up from 2008's 49.5%, although the Ford Expedition was the top-selling nameplate.
You can click any model name in the tables below to find historical monthly and yearly Canadian 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 • 2010 Year End • 2008 Year End
SUV | 2009 | 2008 | % Change |
---|---|---|---|
1059 | 1118 | -5.3% | |
1048 | 1874 | -44.1% | |
411 | 1719 | -76.1% | |
97 | 1115 | -91.3% | |
1584 | 1557 | 1.7% | |
1227 | 1585 | -22.6% | |
664 | 842 | -21.1% | |
528 | 187 | 182% | |
196 | 100 | 96.0% | |
800 | 842 | -5.0% | |
--- | --- | --- | --- |
Total | 7614 | 10,939 | -30.3% |
RECOMMENDED READING
Large SUV Sales In Canada - 2008 Year End
Large SUV Sales In Canada - 2010 Year End