Toyota Hilux 002
Sam Charlwood5 Jan 2017
NEWS

VFACTS: Toyota HiLux crowned best selling model of 2016

HiLux and Ford Ranger the big surprises of the year, as Aussies drawn towards the hay hauler

The humble utility has climbed to the top of the Australian new car sales charts for the first time after the Toyota HiLux took top honours for 2016.

Figures revealed by the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries today reveal the HiLux pipped the Toyota Corolla, Hyundai i30 and Mazda3 as Australia's favourite car, in a year in which we bought more new vehicles than ever before.

A utility (or pickup) also featured in fourth position in the final rankings, with Ford's evergreen Ranger mixing it among a small car-heavy fleet, while Mitsubishi's Triton finished ninth. Overall, light commercial vehicles held 18.5 per cent of the market in 2016, up from 17.4 per cent the previous year.

The data reveals 1,178,133 vehicles were sold in 2016, an increase of 2 per cent over the previous 1.15 million record set in 2015. Low interest rates, inflation and rising wealth were cited as the major triggers for the record growth.

December was down 0.9 per cent on the same period last year, with 98,763 vehicles sold.
With an all-new HiLux model brought to market in late 2015, Toyota tempered expectations of its sales prospects this time last year.

But at a function in Sydney today, Toyota Australia executive director Tony Cramb said the new model’s do-it-all versatility proved a hit.

"The buyer profile has changed dramatically in recent years, with HiLux progressively offering the upmarket features and comfort demanded by families while maintaining its traditional popularity among tradespeople as the consummate workhorses," he said.

Toyota was the top selling brand once again in 2016, its 14th year in succession.

The year also marked a huge recovery for Ford, now into its 14th consecutive month of improved sales after 11 years of decline.

Holden experienced tougher times, with sales falling by 8.4 per cent on the previous year. Worryingly the locally-built Commodore, which is due to bow out at the end of 2017, still commands more than 25 per cent of all Holden sales.

FCAI chief executive Tony Weber tipped another possible record in 2017, with little sign of slowing sales.

"The growth, as witnessed in 2016 and appears certain to continue in 2017, is in SUVs and light commercial vehicles, particularly dual cab utilities," he said.

"New models with significant performance and comfort attributes, combined with the existing vehicle mix, continued to make Australia one of the most competitive new car markets in the world."

Top 10 models
Toyota HiLux (42,104), Toyota Corolla (40,330), Hyundai i30 (37,772), Ford Ranger (36,934), Mazda3 (36,107), Toyota Camry (26,485), Holden Commodore (25,860), Mazda CX-5 (25,564), Mitusbishi Triton (21,897), Hyundai Tucson (20,132).

Top 10 makes
Toyota (209,610), Mazda (118,217), Hyundai (101,555), Holden (94,308), Ford (81,207), Mitsubishi (73,368), Nissan (66,826), Volkswagen (56,571), Subaru (47,018) and Kia (42,668).

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Hilux
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Written bySam Charlwood
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