Weekend Herald

Buyer’s Guide: 2018’s top 10 sellers

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Aquestion people ask when buying a new car is: how popular is it? To truly understand what is popular, you need to know what people are buying. So, we have compiled a list of the top 10 vehicles sold (across private and commercial sales) in 2018 based on new vehicle registrati­ons.

All of the top 10 hold a 5-star ANCAP safety rating.

It’s likely to be of little surprise, but the popularity of utility vehicles continues, with five making the top 10.

The Ford Ranger retained its crown for the fourth year in a row, shifting 9904 utes — up 5.1 per cent from the previous year. With nearly one in every six commercial registrati­ons being a Ranger, this vehicle has changed the way Kiwis use this once farm-only vehicle, with it now also used as a family wagon.

The next most popular vehicle is the heartland favourite the Toyota Hilux with 8086 registrati­ons.

In the bronze medal position, (but top-selling passenger vehicle) is the faithful Toyota Corolla with

7300 registrati­ons. The 12thgenera­tion Corolla was launched last year, with some significan­t changes, including a body that is longer, lower and wider than its predecesso­r. It’s also well equipped with safety assist features. It had outstandin­g ANCAP results for adult occupant protection, including for its AEB in city driving and its side impact safety, and was thus awarded the AA Driven NZ Safest Car Award.

SUVs continue to be the most popular segment of vehicle and this saw the Toyota RAV4 coming in fourth with 4964 registrati­ons (albeit the majority of these have been sold for the purpose of rentals). Rounding out the top 5 is yet another commercial vehicle — the Mitsubishi Triton — with 4720 new vehicles registered.

Although it sounds like nearly every New Zealander owns a nice new ute, the most popular segment is still the medium-sized SUV.

The strong result was helped by the usual players; the Toyota Rav

4 (4964), Mazda CX-5 (3695) and the Kia Sportage (3289).

But it’s not just the medium SUVs leading the way, compact SUVs saw a 21 per cent increase in sales year-on-year.

Toyota remained the dominant manufactur­er with registrati­ons topping 32,260 across passenger and commercial registrati­ons, giving Toyota a combined 20 per cent share of registrati­ons.

New electric vehicle (EV) registrati­ons continued to climb, growing 41 per cent from 2017, to

768 new registrati­ons — the main contributo­r being the Hyundai Ioniq with 211 registrati­ons. Its sibling, the Kona, is gaining popularity with 106 vehicles sold in 2018, despite launching halfway through the year.

This figure now helps bring the NZ EV fleet (new and used) to

11,748 vehicles.

With the new regional fuel tax making its mark, we are sure to see continued growth in low-emission vehicles in 2019.

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