Prius sales are down in the US. Why?

Jed Kim Sep 8, 2016
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Priuses have become synonymous with highly fuel-efficient vehicles. Tomohiro Ohsumi/Getty Images

Prius sales are down in the US. Why?

Jed Kim Sep 8, 2016
Priuses have become synonymous with highly fuel-efficient vehicles. Tomohiro Ohsumi/Getty Images
HTML EMBED:
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Toyota has reported that Prius sales are down 26 percent in the U.S. so far this calendar year. As the car represents the majority of the hybrid market, a decline in interest has significance for all highly fuel-efficient vehicles.

“The Prius, from Day 1, has really been the bellwether for the efficient vehicle movement,” said George Hoffer, who teaches automotive economics at the University of Richmond. “In essence, it has become the synonym — and has remained such — for the efficient car.”

Though many point to lower gas prices as the reason for poor sales, experts said it is only one part of the equation.

“Everybody says it’s cheap gas,” said Michelle Krebs, a senior analyst for AutoTrader. “That is not the full answer of why hybrids are not doing well.”

“Consumers, in enormous numbers, are turning away from cars to sport utility vehicles,” she said.

Krebs said the change in tastes spans generations. More young adults are beginning families and want more maneuvering room for car seats. Also, taller vehicles are kinder on baby boomers’ knees as they enter and exit.  

Hoffer said the shift away from smaller vehicles could prove temporary, owing to current tastes and low gas prices. He said manufacturing decisions based on a temporary trend could be damaging.

“We’ve become a 60 percent truck market and 40 percent car market, and I think that is potentially dangerous,” Hoffer said. “Potentially dangerous because so much of this is driven by two things which may not last very long.”

Sales of hybrids and other small vehicles would likely pick back up if gas prices spike, but experts said that effect could be limited, since all vehicles are seeing better fuel efficiency. 

“As you improve fuel economy, the value to the consumer of that improvement gets smaller and smaller as you go to high levels of fuel economy,” said David Cole, chairman of the board of AutoHarvest 

In a written statement, Toyota spokesman Aaron Fowles said the company will not make decisions based on current fuel prices.

“We take a long-term view when it comes to product decisions,” Fowles wrote. “While fuel prices are currently low, which tends to result in more truck and SUV sales, they will ebb and flow over time. Toyota’s hybrids are still strong, with almost 70 percent of the hybrid market.”

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