toyota landcruiser 70 series e0ug
Toby Hagon1 Aug 2022
NEWS

V8 sales hit all-time record in Australia

But it’s downhill from here for the beloved bent eight…

Australians bought a record number of new V8-powered vehicles over the past decade or so, with almost half a million bent-eight cars finding Aussie homes in the past 12 years, but our enthusiasm for one of the world’s most loved engine configurations is fast waning.

A record 49,674 V8s were snapped up in 2017, representing 4.2 per cent of the entire car market. It was the peak year of the 473,253 V8 vehicles reported as sold between 2010 and 2021.

The spectacular demise of the locally-made V8 muscle car and ongoing moves to downsize engines in the face of rising fuel prices and tightening emissions regulations means V8s are going from mainstream to a declining niche.

RAM 1500 TRX

This year Australians look set to buy more zero-cylinder vehicles – EVs – than V8s for the first time.

And while it’s tempting to blame the V8 shift on the demise of the Ford Falcon and Holden Commodore, which had V8s as their hero models, there’s another brand that has long set the V8 trend: Toyota.

For a decade Toyota has dominated sales of V8s. Between 2010 and 2021 it sold more V8s in Australia than the other 23 brands that sold V8s here combined.

Since 2017 more than 10 per cent of Toyota’s sales – one in 10 – have been V8s. The Toyota V8 mania peaked in 2021 with 12.2 per cent of all Toyotas sold here powered by a V8.

Whereas the emphasis with most V8s is on high performance, for Toyota it’s about shifting upwards of 2.5 tonnes of LandCruiser and towing heavy loads.

Toyota LandCruiser 70 Series

In the overall record V8 year of 2017 Toyota sold 21,729 V8-powered LandCruiser wagons and LandCruiser 70 Series commercial vehicles.

That shades the 13,607 Commodore V8s sold by Holden in its final year manufacturing cars in Australia – when the love of Aussie muscle cars was at its peak.

In that same year the Ford Mustang hit a local sales record of 9165 cars – and 7606 of them were powered by the iconic 5.0-litre V8.

Between the last-ever V8 Commodore and the hugely popular Ford Mustang, the combined V8 sales tally was still outdone by Toyota, which at the same time continued marketing itself as eco-friendly with its growing range of hybrid models.

Toyota LandCruiser 70 Series

Only in 2019 did Toyota sell more hybrids than V8s in the modern era. Not that it has slowed the Toyota V8 juggernaut.

Since 2015 Toyota has been growing sales of V8s, reaching a peak of 25,457 sales in 2021.

It’s a record for any brand (V8s have always been popular but were mostly low-volume performance models prior to the 21st century) and a record that’s unlikely to be broken.

The V8 charge for Toyota was led by the LandCruiser 200 Series, which late in 2021 was replaced by the diesel V6-powered LandCruiser 300 Series. That one move has taken about one-third of the annual V8 sales out of the mix.

Toyota LandCruiser 300 Series

While the 70 Series continues with V8 power, it’s unlikely to ever break that 2021 sales record on its own.

Some brands that once sold V8s here no longer do. They include Chrysler, Volvo, Volkswagen and, of course, Holden. Others, including Mercedes-Benz, Audi and BMW, are replacing V8s with smaller-capacity engines.

There is still some growth in V8s thanks to the growing number of American pick-up trucks being sold here. RAM is now the second highest-selling V8 brand in Australia, for example, outselling Mercedes-Benz since 2019.

Of the two brands most closely associated with V8 engines in Australia – Ford and Holden – it’s Holden that has dominated with sales.

Holden Commodore VF Series II

Even with the arrival of the Mustang late in 2015 – most of which have been V8s – Ford still managed only 33,455 V8 sales between 2010 and 2021.

Holden, on the other hand, notched up 106,890 in the same period.

V8s have long been part of the Australian motoring landscape but were cemented once Ford fitted one to its XR Falcon in 1966, followed by Holden in the HK in 1968.

V8s gained in popularity in the 1970s with a string of high-profile muscle cars and success on the racetrack, especially at Bathurst’s Mount Panorama.

Ford Mustang GT
Eight V8 fast facts
  • Holden sold 13,607 V8s in the last year of the locally made Commodore. While not an outright sales record (the company shifted 16,807 V8s in 2010) it was comfortably a record V8 share, with almost half (47.8 per cent) of all Commodore variants (including Ute) fitted with a V8.
  • Between 2010 and 2021 Toyota sold more V8s than all other brands in Australia combined. Those other brands include Ford, Holden, Chrysler, Nissan, Audi, BMW, Jaguar, Lexus, Mercedes-Benz, Maserati, Aston Martin, Porsche, Ferrari, Morgan, McLaren, Jeep, Volvo, Volkswagen, Bentley, Lamborghini, Chevrolet, RAM and Infiniti.
  • Toyota sold 237,216 V8s in Australia between 2010 and 2021, accounting for 50.1 per cent of all V8s over the 12-year period. By comparison, Holden sold 106,890 between 2010 and 2019 (when the last of the V8 Commodores were finally sold).
  • Since 2011 Toyota has dominated sales of V8s. In 2012, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021 and 2022 Toyota sold more V8s than all other brands combined.
  • Holden sold more V8s in 2010 (16,807, representing 28 per cent of Commodore/Statesman/Caprice/Ute sales) but a higher percentage in 2017 (16,807 for almost 48 per cent of Commodore/Statesman/Caprice/Ute sales).
  • Toyota hybrid sales only overtook its V8 sales in 2019. In 2021 Toyota sold almost three times more hybrids than V8s.
  • 2020 represented the highest proportion of V8-powered vehicles sold in Australia. 38,949 V8s were sold in a COVID-depressed year that saw sales slump to 916,968. That meant 4.25 per cent of all vehicles sold in 2020 were V8s. * 2022 is shaping up to be the first year Australians buy more electric cars than V8s.

New V8 vehicle sales by brand (2010-2021)

Year
Toyota
Holden
Ford
Nissan
RAM
Mercedes-Benz
Total V8 sales
2010
15,649
16,807
695
0
0
1411
38,700
2011
15,642
13,730
1030
0
0
1008
35,167
2012
18,741
10,847
934
0
0
1545
35,394
2013
17,216
12,009
473
700
0
1589
36,709
2014
16,373
12,871
882
589
0
1632
37,491
2015
15,746
11,798
1436
654
0
1703
36,079
2016
18,844
13,562
6093
723
6
2377
45,382
2017
21,729
13,607
7667
682
0
2482
49,674
2018
23,714
1623
5699
1259
491
2518
38,581
2019
23,024
36
3614
1951
2516
2401
37,058
2020
25,081
0
2554
2820
3030
1289
38,949
2021
25,457
0
2378
3333
3743
2735
44,069

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Written byToby Hagon
Our team of independent expert car reviewers and journalists
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