Private new car sales increased by 6% in February compared to the same month last year, according to industry data published this morning, with fleet registrations also performing strongly.
February is often an unreliable indicator of market trends, as it and August are the two smallest months of the year ahead of the new number plate boom months of March and September. March registrations are usually larger than January and February combined, so we’ll get a true indication of where the new car market sits in a month’s time.
Fleet sales powering market growth
The February data, published by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT), showed overall market growth of 26% compared to 2022 results. As in the last few months, this was largely off the back of growth in fleet purchasing, which increased by 46%.
However, it’s certainly positive that this month was the seventh in a row to show overall growth after the difficulties of the last three years. That bodes well for used car buyers over the next few months as an increasing number of ex-fleet cars filter through into the used car market.
New car registrations by buyer type
February
Buyer | Feb 2023 | Feb 2022 | % change | Market share 2023 | Market share 2022 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Private | 29,391 | 27,784 | 5.8% | 39.5% | 47.1% |
Fleet | 43,738 | 29,907 | 46.2% | 58.8% | 50.7% |
Business | 1,312 | 1,303 | 0.7% | 1.8% | 2.2% |
Total | 74,441 | 58,994 | 26.2% |
Buyers sticking with petrol power
In volume terms, the largest growth was in petrol cars (including mild hybrid petrol cars), which increased by more than 11,000 units over the same month last year. That means that petrol’s share of the new car market improved from 53% last February to 57% this year. Hybrids also performed well, up 40% year-on-year. That’s a larger growth in percentage terms but on a much smaller volume – up about 3,000 units.
Electric cars were underwhelming, up by 18% against an overall market growth of 26%, meaning that in terms of market share they actually went backwards. Plug-in hybrids sales continue to tank, down to just 6% of the market. We regularly make the point that it’s difficult to judge EV results on a month-by-month basis because Tesla’s boom/bust approach to car sales skews things massively, but there’s certainly enough information to suggest that action is needed.
Given the imperative for all new cars to be either electric or plug-in hybrid in less than seven years, the lack of growth for EVs and plug-in hybrids is problematic. Tesla is likely to turn in another strong month in March, which will ‘balance the books’ to a degree, but the rest of the car industry needs to see stronger EV sales in very short order.
Finally, diesel sales also fell in terms of both overall volume and market share, which should be no surprise to anyone. If no-one bought big SUVs, new diesel sales would be almost non-existent by now.
New car sales by fuel type
February
Fuel | Feb 2023 | Feb 2022 | % change | Market share 2023 | Market share 2022 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Petrol* | 42,378 | 31,213 | 35.8% | 56.9% | 52.9% |
Electric | 12,310 | 20,417 | 18.2% | 16.5% | 17.7% |
Hybrid | 9,633 | 6,883 | 40.0% | 12.9% | 11.7% |
Diesel* | 5,397 | 5,804 | -7.0% | 7.3% | 9.8% |
Plug-in hybrid | 4,723 | 4,677 | 1.0% | 6.3% | 7.9% |
Total | 74,441 | 58,994 | 26.2% |
Source: SMMT
Good month, bad month
Regardless of whether the overall market moves up or down, there are always individual car brands that do better or worse than average. This month, the overall market was up by 26% year-on-year.
It was a good month for Alpine, Audi, Cupra, Dacia, DS Automobiles, Ford, Genesis, Hyundai, Jeep, Land Rover, Nissan, Polestar, Porsche, Renault, SEAT, Skoda, SsangYong and Volkswagen. All of these brands exceeded the overall market performance by at least 10% – meaning their sales were up by at least 36% year-on-year.
Meanwhile, it wasn’t so exciting for Abarth, Bentley, BMW, Citroën, Honda, Jaguar, Kia, Mazda, Mercedes-Benz, MG, Mini, Peugeot, Smart and Tesla. All of these brands underachieved against the overall market by at least 10% – meaning growth of less than 16% (and in some cases, sharp declines in sales).
That means that brands like Alfa Romeo, Fiat, Lexus, Maserati, Subaru, Suzuki, Vauxhall and Volvo were all – more or less – in a similar position to last year in the overall marketplace.
Ford was the biggest-selling brand in February, pipping Volkswagen by only 35 units to take top spot. Vauxhall had a strong month to finish third (presumably off the back of a 0% finance offer across its entire range), ahead of Audi and Hyundai.
As mentioned, no-one’s likely to be partying hard or slitting their wrists based on February’s results. March will be far more important, so we’ll be analysing next month’s data very closely.
February
Rank | Brand | Registrations | Market share |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Ford | 6,852 | 9.2% |
2 | Volkswagen | 6,817 | 9.2% |
3 | Vauxhall | 5,513 | 7.4% |
4 | Audi | 4,631 | 6.2% |
5 | Hyundai | 4,318 | 5.8% |
6 | Skoda | 3,983 | 5.4% |
7 | Toyota | 3,889 | 5.2% |
8 | BMW | 3,571 | 4.8% |
9 | Kia | 3,538 | 4.8% |
10 | Nissan | 3,285 | 4.4% |
Year to date
Rank | Brand | Registrations | Market share |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Volkswagen | 19,244 | 9.3% |
2 | Ford | 16,008 | 7.8% |
3 | Audi | 13,659 | 6.6% |
4 | Kia | 12,552 | 6.1% |
5 | Toyota | 12,495 | 6.1% |
6 | BMW | 11,383 | 5.5% |
7 | Vauxhall | 10,763 | 5.2% |
8 | Hyundai | 10,555 | 5.1% |
9 | Skoda | 9,516 | 4.6% |
10 | Nissan | 8,956 | 4.3% |
Vauxhall Corsa back on top
It was a return to the top of the sales charts for the first time in months for the Vauxhall Corsa, which comfortably led the way in February ahead of its SUV stablemate, the Vauxhall Mokka. The Ford Puma edged out the Nissan Juke for third place in a strong month for small SUVs.
What was most interesting was the absence of the Nissan Qashqai from the top ten chart in February. The Mini hatch was also a no-show in the best-sellers list, meaning that there were no British-built cars in the top ten. MG, which topped the charts last month and had two cars in the top ten, was also missing this month, but that’s less surprising given that it doesn’t normally feature anyway.
As in January, there were only two superminis in the top ten (Vauxhall Corsa and Ford Fiesta), with the other eight vehicles being crossovers/SUVs.
We’ll update our round-up of the country’s best-selling cars in the next day or two.
February
Rank | Brand | Registrations |
---|---|---|
1 | Vauxhall Corsa | 2,818 |
2 | Vauxhall Mokka | 1,805 |
3 | Ford Puma | 1,590 |
4 | Nissan Juke | 1,561 |
5 | Hyundai Tucson | 1,528 |
6 | Tesla Model Y | 1,482 |
7 | Volkswagen T-Roc | 1,360 |
8 | Ford Fiesta | 1,303 |
9 | Kia Sportage | 1,262 |
10 | Toyota C-HR | 1,244 |
Year to date
Rank | Brand | Registrations |
---|---|---|
1 | Vauxhall Corsa | 5,243 |
2 | Volkswagen T-Roc | 4,616 |
3 | Nisan Qashqai | 4,318 |
4 | MG HS | 4,042 |
5 | Ford Puma | 3,906 |
6 | Hyundai Tucson | 3,787 |
7 | Kia Niro | 3,723 |
8 | Kia Sportage | 3,671 |
9 | Vauxhall Mokka | 3,479 |
10 | Ford Fiesta | 3,345 |