New car prices climbed to another record in October, pushing the average transaction cost to the brink of $50,000 for the first time and leaving many buyers stunned by how quickly the market has shifted.
According to FOX Business, new data from Edmunds shows the average price paid for a new vehicle last month was $49,105 — a 3.1% increase compared to a year earlier.
The jump reflects broad price inflation across nearly every category of vehicle, with experts warning that there are virtually no models on the market today that cost less than they did in recent years.
“This has been something that we’ve all been waiting for, I don’t think anyone was ever expecting the number to go down,” Ivan Drury, director of insights at Edmunds, told FOX Business.
Drury said the surge in electric vehicle sales contributed to the new record, since EVs tend to cost more than gas-powered models and helped push overall transaction prices “over the edge.”
But he emphasized that even without EVs in the mix, shoppers shouldn’t expect relief.
“Strip all that away, there’s virtually no vehicle you can buy today that is cheaper than it was from last year, two years ago, five years ago,” he said.
That reality is hitting returning buyers especially hard. Drury noted that the average trade-in vehicle toward a new purchase is now around five-and-a-half to six years old — meaning many shoppers last bought a car in 2019 or 2020, when prices were significantly lower.
“If you’re a customer with a trade-in, and you haven’t been to the dealership for anything other than service in six years, you’re going to be floored by seeing the average transaction price being nearly $10,000 more than the last time you bought,” he said.
Monthly payments are climbing as well. The average new-car payment in October reached $766, up 3.2% from a year earlier.
Interest rates eased slightly, with the average APR dipping from 7% to 6.9%, but Drury said that’s still well above the 4% to 5% rates many buyers had on their last loans.
“The average interest paid over the life of a loan today, your average amount to be financed at $43,000; a 72-month term is the most frequent; you’re looking at like $9,500 in interest alone — so you’re not even paying for the car at that point, that’s a privilege to borrow,” he said.
Dealers are offering more discounts than they were earlier in the pandemic, though the relief is limited. Average incentives rose to $2,240 in October after peaking at $2,262 in June.
“For dealerships, they are resorting back to providing discounts. They are getting money from automakers to put cash on the hood,” Drury said.
Still, he noted that vehicles remain on dealer lots for about 60 days — acceptable by industry standards, but longer than many stores prefer as they look to keep inventory moving.
With prices high and borrowing costs still elevated, analysts warn that affordability challenges are likely to persist for buyers heading into next year.














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