Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Vehicles on the road keep getting older

COVID-19 could push age higher

- By Eric D. Lawrence Detroit Free Press

The average age of a vehicle on U.S. roads has climbed to almost a dozen years.

It’s part of a long-term trend of people holding on to their cars, trucks and SUVs longer, but the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic is expected to add even more pressure to this phenomenon, possibly pushing the average up four to six months compared with a more modest increase in recent years.

Todd Campau, associate director of aftermarke­t solutions for IHS Markit, which reported the findings, said the virus has created a “perfect storm” for this trend to continue.

“IHS Markit anticipate­s significan­t upward pressure on average age in 2020 and subsequent years as consumers work toward a new normal both economical­ly and in how they use their personal vehicles in a post-COVID-19 era,” Campau said in a news release.

Part of that new normal means fewer people commuting but also less demand for public transporta­tion and ride hailing. Consumers might also be more likely than before to choose a personal vehicle for travel, both around town and for road trips, when in the past they might have opted to fly.

The average vehicle age of 11.9 years in 2020 — 12.4 for cars and 11.6 for light trucks — represents a 24% increase over the age in 2002, when the average was 9.6. In 2009, the year the Great Recession ended, it was 10.3 years, according to the IHS Markit data, which is as of Jan. 1.

The U.S. vehicle population surpassed 280 million this year, a 1% increase over 2019, according to IHS Markit.

Vehicles 16 years and older now account for more than 25% of those on the road, Campau said.

 ?? JANE TYSKA/BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ??
JANE TYSKA/BAY AREA NEWS GROUP

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