We all complain about the cost of new cars. Average transaction prices in the US were around $30,000 in 2012 and reached $40,000 eight years later, and yes, we complained then, too. But during the COVID pandemic, about 2021, the global shortage of semiconductors forced automakers to decide which vehicles would get microchips that were in short supply.
2027 Audi A3 Interior refreshAudi
Well-equipped cars took priority, because that’s what people were buying. That quickly pushed the average toward the $50,000 mark, and the industry hasn’t looked back since then. We’ve been flirting with that level for four years, according to a timeline released this week by Cox Automotive. And it’s hurting the bank accounts of those stretching to make payments.
Consumers Asked, Automakers Responded, Inflation Happened
2026 Honda CR-V Hybrid TrailSport interior veiw of the front seat and dashboardHonda
In this week’s Cox Automotive market trends briefing to mark the close of the first half of 2026, analysts explained that customer demand for new technologies has contributed directly to transaction prices hovering near $50,000, without much hope for them falling significantly in the future.
Consumers have come to appreciate the flood of new features like automatic emergency braking, pedestrian detection, lane departure warning, backup cameras, remote start, in-vehicle Wi-Fi, and rear cross-traffic alert, but the stuff ain’t free. These were luxury features not long ago, and some of them are standard equipment now on all vehicles, even the handful of cars starting under $25,000.
Cox Automotive 2026 Mid-Year Review, looking at vehicle affordabilityCox Automotive
“The car got better because we asked it to. The real question is whether the price that came with it is as crazy as the headlines say.”
–Cox Automotive Executive Analyst Erin Keating
The Honda CR-V is a good example to demonstrate how cars have changed in one decade – yes, more expensive but much more capable. Cox Automotive Executive Analyst Erin Keating gathered information about the popular CR-V LX, carrying an average cost of $27,761 in 2016 that jumped to $38,778 in 2026. Adjusted for inflation, the 2026 price is $478 higher than the 2016 model.
Cox Automotive 2026 Mid-Year Review, looking at vehicle affordabilityCox Automotive
But let’s explore how the CR-V changed over those 10 years. The fourth-generation model ended production in 2016, and Honda is now producing the sixth-generation CR-V in 2026. “The 2016 model had a five-inch screen, no Apple CarPlay, no driver assist, a naturally aspirated engine,” Keating says. “The 2026 version is turbocharged, nine-inch touchscreen, wireless CarPlay, Honda Sensing standard on every trim, adaptive cruise, push-button start. It’s a genuinely better car and in real dollars, it costs about the same.”
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We’ve Got More Bad News About New Car Prices
Much like housing, buying a new car has never cost Americans more.
That does little to help buyers manage hefty monthly payments on modern cars, though. While this comparison might mitigate the sting of sticker shock and the challenges of fitting a new car into the family budget, the arrival of software-defined vehicles opens the door to subscription services that threaten to tack on even more expense for struggling consumers, if automakers want to start charging monthly fees for remote start, stolen vehicle recovery, and Apple CarPlay. Alternatively, Keating does note the cheapest new car in America is the Hyundai Venue compact crossover at around $22,000, but it won’t have the same standard gear as the Honda you want.
Consumer Purchase Power Eroding
Most consumers expect those features to be standard equipment, based on a survey conducted last year by Cox Automotive. So, what percentage of consumers would pay a monthly fee to have CarPlay in their cars?
2026 Kia EV9 Apple CarPlay on the main touchscreenKia
“For CarPlay, it’s only forty-five percent. So, a lot of folks expect it for free, but wouldn’t spend a dime on it à la carte.”
Paychecks Not Keeping Up With Inflation
Cox Automotive 2026 Mid-Year Review, looking at vehicle affordabilityCox Automotive
Cox Chief Economist Jeremy Robb points to several broader factors impacting vehicle affordability: spending confidence is increasingly concentrated among the wealthy; war with Iran has pushed fuel prices higher; tariffs have hit consumers with higher import costs; and the consumer price index has risen 4.9% on average over five years, eroding purchasing power.
Compounding these effects is something closer to home: for the last several years, the growth in everyday expenses has been outpacing the growth in paychecks.
Cox Automotive 2026 Mid-Year Review, looking at vehicle affordabilityCox Automotive
Cox also dug into how automotive costs compare to other household expenses as they have fluctuated over the past year, compared to the past five years. Housing, of course, is the most expensive, and spiking gas prices show up in the chart above. And while the automotive sector has contributed to inflation in recent years, it’s not because of vehicle prices but due to bigger consumer cost increases for car insurance, maintenance and repair, and public transportation.
“We see that auto spending is a big factor in overall inflation – however, much of that is just not coming from the actual price of a vehicle.”
–Cox Chief Economist Jeremy Robb
CarBuzz Insight – Why This Matters:
We all feel the pain at the pump and might stress out wondering how to buy our next car. But the latest Cox Automotive report sheds light on the overall economic factors at play and the cost impact of so much new technology appearing on vehicles. It might feel like a new car is completely out of reach, but today it takes 34.9 weeks of median household income in America to buy a new car, which is up only slightly from 33.7 weeks in 2016.
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Americans Are Buying More Car Than They Can Afford
It’s a firestorm of economic factors that has many borrowers falling way behind on their payments.
Truly, this provides no solace if you also thought cars were way too expensive 10 years ago. But here’s a silver lining: Four years ago, at the height of COVID, it took 42 weeks of median household income to buy a new car. The average length of a car loan today is 69 months (nearly six years), while seven-year loans are becoming increasingly common. Longer loans tack on loads of interest: Over the past 10 years, interest rates for car loans went from an average 6.5% to 9.5%, pushing average monthly car payments up to $753 today. My first mortgage payment was less than that, some 30 years ago.
Source: Cox Automotive
