New Vehicle Prices Top $52,000 for the First Time. The Market Has Barely Blinked.
Today—just two days before the July 4th weekend that typically highlights the summer selling season—the average marketed price of a new vehicle has...

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2 min read
Rick Wainschel, VP Data Science & Analytics
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Updated on July 1, 2026
Today—just two days before the July 4th weekend that typically highlights the summer selling season—the average marketed price of a new vehicle has surpassed $52,000 for the first time ever.
By itself, that's a remarkable milestone.
Over the past several years, new vehicle prices have climbed steadily as manufacturers raised MSRPs, vehicle mix shifted toward higher-priced models, and the market settled into a new pricing reality. Crossing the $52,000 threshold is another reminder of just how dramatically the new vehicle landscape has changed.

But the more interesting story isn't that prices reached another record. It's that consumers have continued buying.
Despite record-high advertised prices, new vehicle movement strengthened throughout the second quarter, suggesting buyers have become largely immunized to pricing increases after contending
with more than four years of ongoing elevated costs.

There's an important distinction between record prices and price shock.
In 2021, the rapid escalation in vehicle prices fundamentally changed the economics of buying a new vehicle. Consumers suddenly found themselves paying thousands of dollars more than they had before, and affordability quickly became one of the industry's defining concerns.
Today, the average price may be setting new records, but consumers have now spent five years operating in a market where vehicle prices are substantially higher than historical norms. That doesn't mean affordability is no longer a concern. It certainly is.
But it does suggest that buyers have largely adjusted their expectations. A new all-time high is significant from a market perspective, yet it doesn’t fundamentally change purchasing behavior
the way the initial surge in prices did.
In other words, $52,000 is a new milestone—but high prices themselves are no longer new.
That's the question we're hearing most often.
If the average new vehicle now costs more than ever before, why hasn't demand weakened?
The answer isn't as simple as "consumers are willing to pay more." Several factors are influencing today's market, and together they've helped support demand even as advertised prices continue climbing.
We'll explore those dynamics in much greater detail in our upcoming Q2 State of the Industry Report, where we examine the forces driving today's resilient demand—and what that means for dealers and OEMs during the second half of the year.
For now, one conclusion is already clear: The industry has crossed another pricing milestone. The bigger story is that the market barely flinched.
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