1 Ford F150
2 Jeep Grand Cherokee
3 Chevrolet Silverado 1500
4 Chevrolet Corvette
5 Ford Mustang
6 Jeep Wrangler
7 Ford Escape
8 Ford F250
9 Chevrolet Tahoe
10 Toyota Camry
11 Honda Accord
12 Honda Civic
13 Dodge Ram 1500
14 Chevrolet Impala
15 Dodge Charger
16 Ford Explorer
17 Chevrolet Camaro
18 Cadillac CTS
19 Toyota RAV4
20 Nissan Altima
21 Audi A4
22 GMC Sierra 1500
23 Toyota Tacoma
24 BMW X5
25 Chevrolet Silverado 2500
26 Honda CR-V 27 Honda Pilot
28 Ford Ranger
29 Cadillac Escalade
30 Toyota Highlander
31 Chevrolet TrailBlazer
32 Jeep Liberty
33 Ford Fusion
34 Toyota 4Runner
35 Chevrolet Equinox
36 Chevrolet Malibu
37 Toyota Corolla
38 Volkswagen Jetta
39 Subaru Impreza
40 Ford Expedition
41 Nissan Maxima
42 Chevrolet Avalanche
43 Toyota Tundra
44 Acura MDX
45 GMC Yukon
46 Chrysler 300
47 Ford Edge
48 Volkswagen Passat
49 Mercedes-Benz E-Class
50 Ford F350
yup pretty much the everyday cars i see on my commute to work…what type of data collection is used to determine these most searched cars…do they take like zip code inputs from like autotrader.com and lemonfree.com
Yes those results come from web searches and from sites like Autotrader, cars.com etc for our general area. I had some of the same ideas as you guys but I think the private party sales are skewing the numbers. Most sales are private party and that is why some of the cars we retail the most do not show up high on the list. Interesting to see though. My surprises were the F350 being so low with the number of businesses that use them and the Corvette being so high for the month of November.
we should go “anon” on this and have everybody on nyspeed set up an automated search for something like “Ferrari F430” 100 times a days and try to skew the numbers