Boston Herald

Minivans still carry appeal

Market has dropped, but not disappeare­d

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DETROIT — They were the suburban vehicle of choice in the 1990s and early 2000s, but ever since, minivans appeared to be riding the slow lane to extinction.

The soccer moms who once made the boxy people-haulers ubiquitous have shunned them for car-based SUVs with three rows of seats. Many automakers have stopped selling them. In fact, Chrysler sold more minivans by itself in their heyday than the entire industry does today.

But don’t turn in the van keys just yet. For the automakers that still make them — Fiat Chrysler, Honda, Toyota and Kia — the minivan business is still good because the competitio­n has bailed, giving them a bigger piece of a shrinking pie. And they’re hoping that as more millennial­s, now ages 23 to 38, raise families, they’ll see the value of sliding doors, fold-flat seats, ample storage and easy access to the third row.

Because of their people-hauling capabiliti­es, minivans also hold promise as autonomous vehicles, meaning they may once again become popular — if people don’t have to be seen actually driving them.

“There is nothing else that can compete with a minivan,” says Tim Kuniskis, head of passenger vehicles for Fiat Chrysler, which leads all automakers in sales with two minivans in the U.S. market. “From a carrying people and stuff perspectiv­e, nothing touches it.”

Last year, minivan sales sank to 364,000, the lowest level in more than 30 years and only about one-quarter of the 1.33 million sold in 2000, the peak year, according to the CarGurus.com auto website. Sales are down another 16% in the first half of this year, with no end to the decline in sight. That’s a far cry from 1993 to 2005, when automakers sold more than 1 million of the vans every year.

Also, minivan market share has slipped from 7.2% of U.S. new-vehicle sales in 2000 to 2.5% this year, according to the Edmunds.com auto pricing site, which provides content to The Associated Press.

Minivan sales generally follow birth rates, which have been falling for 32 years, said George Augustaiti­s, director of industry analytics for CarGurus, who predicts further declines. “It’s going to exist, but it’s never going to exist like it once had.”

 ?? AP ?? TRIED AND TRUE TRANSPORAT­ION: Melanie Matcheson loads balloons into her Chrysler Pacifica in Southingto­n, Conn.
AP TRIED AND TRUE TRANSPORAT­ION: Melanie Matcheson loads balloons into her Chrysler Pacifica in Southingto­n, Conn.

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