Average New‑Vehicle Price Nears $50,000 as Affordable Models Vanish
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New federal inflation data and industry figures show the average new vehicle in the U.S. now sells for nearly $50,000, up about 30% in six years, with new car prices jumping 12.6% over the past year even as overall consumer prices rose 3.3% in March 2026. The share of vehicles listing under $30,000 has collapsed to roughly 13% of the market from 40% five years ago, as automakers have cut back cheaper sedans in favor of high‑margin SUVs and pickups and loaded more models with costly safety and tech features. According to CarGurus and J.D. Power, the typical monthly payment on a new vehicle has climbed to about $775 on a six‑year loan with 10% down, and more than 12% of buyers are now stretching to seven‑year loans, up from nearly 8% a year earlier, locking themselves into higher total interest costs. Economists at Cox Automotive say the issue is less about basic transportation being available and more about how much vehicle consumers can realistically afford, while younger buyers in particular report being squeezed by parallel spikes in housing, child care, and other necessities. The article notes that domestic automakers’ average prices have drifted higher than many Asian competitors and that lingering effects from the pandemic, supply chain disruptions, and tariffs have all helped push vehicle prices higher, compounding the Iran‑war‑driven surge in gasoline costs that is already making driving more expensive.