Americans Are Keeping Their Cars Longer, as Vehicle Age Hits 12 Years

Authored by wsj.com and submitted by koavf

The average age of vehicles on U.S. roadways rose to a record 12.1 years last year, as lofty prices and improved quality prompt owners to hold on to their cars longer.

It was the first time the average vehicle age rose above 12 years, according to data released Monday by research firm IHS Markit. While the average vehicle age has risen steadily over the last 15 years, the trend accelerated during the coronavirus pandemic partly because of a drop in new-car sales, IHS said.

The finding reflects the stronger value of vehicles throughout their life cycles, from higher new-vehicle prices Americans have been paying for years to steeper prices on the used-car lot, said Todd Campau, associate director of aftermarket solutions at IHS. Improved vehicle quality also is a factor, he said.

Whereas 20 years ago a car might have changed hands once or twice and lasted 100,000 miles, it is more common today for a car to have multiple owners and last for 200,000 miles or more, he said.

“That has extended the life cycle of the vehicle and created value for more buyers up and down the chain,” Mr. Campau. “For that second or third or fourth owner, there’s still meat on the bone.”

Preact5 on June 20th, 2021 at 20:06 UTC »

I drive a 97 Integra GSR with 365,000 miles on it and I'm never selling it.

Unfair_Increase on June 20th, 2021 at 16:27 UTC »

This isn't helped by the fact that car prices are through the roof right now. A couple minutes ago I was casually scrolling through Carmax and saw a 2014 Mustang GT with 91K miles for $26,998 (Hulen Mall TX dealership in case anyone doubts this.) This is out of control.

fluffspeed on June 20th, 2021 at 16:24 UTC »

2 cars I can say that I still see all the time in the 15+ age range and that's the Camry and Buicks/GM with the 3.8 engines.