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    VFACTS January 2026: Australia's new-vehicle market up... just

    The Australian new-car market was up only incrementally in January, held back by drops from top-selling brands like Toyota, Mazda and Ford.

    William Stopford

    William Stopford

    News Editor

    William Stopford

    William Stopford

    News Editor

    Australia’s new-vehicle market had a steady start for the year with a total of 87,753 vehicles delivered in January, an increase of just 0.1 per cent.

    Private sales were essentially flat and business and government sales were down, leaving rental companies to save the day – sales to these organisations were up by 47 per cent.

    Registrations of petrol-powered vehicles slumped by 14.7 per cent compared with January 2025, while plug-in hybrids (PHEVs) were up 170.5 per cent.

    Collating data from the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries’ VFACTS report and the Electric Vehicle Council’s monthly sales report, electric vehicles (EVs) were up by 93.3 per cent. This increase would have been higher were it not for EV market-leader Tesla, which fell by 32.2 per cent year-on-year (YoY).

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    Hybrids were up by only 2.0 per cent, hurt by a significant decline in Toyota RAV4 deliveries.

    The top-selling vehicle, therefore, wasn’t the RAV4 as it was in December 2025. Instead, the Ford Ranger ute took the top spot, with the Toyota HiLux in second place and the Mazda CX-5 in third.

    “We are seeing fewer petrol vehicles sold and rapid growth in plug-in hybrids, while uptake of hybrid and battery electric vehicles is more stable,” said FCAI chief executive Tony Weber.

    Brands

    Toyota sales slumped by 22.3 per cent, hurt somewhat by the transition between HiLux generations (sales were down by 15.2 per cent) but much more so by the thinning of current RAV4 stock.

    Customer deliveries of the new-generation RAV4 will begin late in March, so next month could see another drop for the popular SUV.

    Prado deliveries were down by 51.1 per cent, though at this time last year deliveries had only just commenced a few months prior for the current-generation model. It therefore appears to have come back down to earth… and placed below the rival Ford Everest once again, after its Blue Oval rival beat it by just 55 units in the 2025 calendar year.

    Mazda was down by 7.6 per cent YoY in January but held onto the second spot, fending off a surging Kia. Strong sales for its top-selling CX-5, which was Australia’s best-selling mid-size SUV in January and up 22.3 per cent, weren’t enough to offset slumping sales for the CX-3 (down 24.3 per cent to 1218 units).

    Kia had a strong month compared to last January, up 15.4 per cent YoY, thanks in large part to the K4 small car having fully come on stream. While the Tasman ute isn’t meeting sales expectations, it accounted for 467 of Kia’s 6600 deliveries.

    The Carnival people mover was also up by 124.3 per cent to 1321 units, making it Kia’s best seller. While we don’t yet have the breakdown of how many Carnivals went to each type of buyer, we suspect a significant percentage of these went to rental fleets.

    After finishing in second place in December and third place overall for 2025, Ford fell to fourth in January. Its deliveries dropped by 10.5 per cent, hindered by a 20 per cent drop for the Ranger. A 13.9 per cent YoY increase for the Everest, which once again beat the Toyota Prado for the title of best-selling large SUV, wasn’t enough to offset this.

    Hyundai rose once again, with deliveries up by 6.9 per cent YoY. Its two best-selling vehicles, the Kona and Tucson SUVs, were up by 41.4 per cent and 20.7 per cent, respectively.

    Despite this finish for the Kona, it was beaten by the rival Chery Tiggo 4 in the small SUV sales race; it was triumphant over the Chinese SUV (and the GWM Haval Jolion) in the 2025 calendar year, so that’s one race we’ll be keeping an eye on this year.

    BYD continued to storm up the sales charts, finishing in sixth place – one of its strongest placings yet, though it finished in fourth position in December 2025.

    The Chinese automaker finished eighth overall last year, marking its first time in the top 10 annually. It looks set to remain a top-10 fixture and is knocking on the door of the top five.

    January’s top 10 was rounded out by GWM (up 31.3 per cent to 4509 units), Mitsubishi (down 23.5 per cent to 4347 units), Chery (up 105.8 per cent to 3780 units), and MG (down 16.5 per cent to 3123 units).

    Isuzu Ute fell just outside of the top 10 at 2929 units, up 2.0 per cent.

    Elsewhere, Tesla delivered just 501 vehicles, down 32.2 per cent on January 2025. It was just 32 units ahead of Zeekr, which is powering up the sales charts following the launch of its Model Y-rivalling 7X late last year.

    Some brands still don’t report their sales figures to the FCAI or the EVC. These include Mahindra, Xpeng and Cadillac.

    BrandJanuary 2026 deliveriesChange YoY
    Toyota14,310-22.3%
    Mazda7692-7.6%
    Kia6600+15.4%
    Ford6116-10.5%
    Hyundai5856+6.9%
    BYD5001+640.9%
    GWM4509+31.3%
    Mitsubishi4347-23.5%
    Chery3780+105.8%
    MG3123-16.5%
    Isuzu Ute2929+2.0%
    Subaru2336-20.1%
    BMW2154+53.7%
    Mercedes-Benz2149+22.4%
    Volkswagen1886-18.5%
    Nissan1871-38.4%
    Honda1222-3.0%
    LDV960-19.5%
    Suzuki908-36.5%
    Audi856-15.6%
    Lexus855-11.8%
    Geely720New
    Omoda Jaecoo691New
    Tesla501-32.2%
    Zeekr469New
    Volvo416-25.7%
    Porsche397-15.2%
    Mini395+13.2%
    Skoda342+4.0%
    Land Rover336-17.0%
    Renault300-28.4%
    Ram277+12.6%
    Chevrolet259-19.6%
    KGM208-33.3%
    Cupra200+7.0%
    Polestar160+95.1%
    Foton120
    Genesis119+13.3%
    JAC118-42.2%
    Deepal99
    Fiat 97-47.0%
    Jeep66-54.5%
    Peugeot65-39.3%
    Leapmotor61+177.3%
    GMC39
    Alfa Romeo340.0%
    Maserati20-16.7%
    Ferrari18+500.0%
    Bentley12+140.0%
    Lamborghini12-52.0%
    Aston Martin70.0%
    Farizon7
    Rolls-Royce6+20.0%
    McLaren4+100.0%
    Jaguar3-92.5%
    Lotus1-80.0%
    Citroen0-100.0%

    Models

    As mentioned, the Toyota RAV4 suffered from a thinning of stock ahead of the arrival of the new-generation model. Despite being Australia’s best-selling vehicle in December 2025, it just scraped into the top 10 in January 2026.

    It was beaten by the rival Mazda CX-5 and Mitsubishi Outlander, with the Hyundai Tucson in striking distance.

    The Ford Ranger took the top spot in January, followed by the Toyota HiLux, with the CX-5 rounding out the podium.

    The Chery Tiggo 4 stormed up the sales charts, sitting in fourth spot – its highest position yet in Australia, also achieved last November – with a 119.4 per cent YoY increase.

    The Ford Everest (sixth place, 1913 units) has entered the year with a strong lead over the rival Toyota Prado (14th place, 1392 units).

    The top 10 was rounded out by the Hyundai Kona, Isuzu D-Max, GWM Haval Jolion and the aforementioned RAV4.

    RankModelJanuary 2026 deliveriesYoY change
    1Ford Ranger3403-20.0%
    2Toyota HiLux2800-15.2%
    3Mazda CX-52289+22.3%
    4Chery Tiggo 42234+119.4%
    5Mitsubishi Outlander1975-5.5%
    6Ford Everest1913+13.9%
    7Hyundai Kona1839+41.4%
    8Isuzu D-Max1798-13.8%
    9GWM Haval Jolion1789+39.1%
    10Toyota RAV41757-65.4%
    11Toyota Corolla1735+9.6%
    12Hyundai Tucson1729+20.7%
    13Mitsubishi Triton1665+36.1%
    14Toyota Prado1392-51.1%
    15Kia Carnival1321+124.3%
    16MG ZS1267+4.5%
    17Kia Sportage1265-30.7%
    18Mazda CX-3 1218-24.3%
    19BYD Sealion 71171
    20Isuzu MU-X1131+43.9%

    Segments

    • Micro cars: Kia Picanto (506), Fiat/Abarth 500 (20)
    • Light cars: MG 3 (707), Mazda 2 (467), Suzuki Swift (248)
    • Small cars under $45,000: Toyota Corolla (1735), Kia K4 (1027), Mazda 3 (865)
    • Small cars over $45,000: Mercedes-Benz A-Class (251), Volkswagen Golf (211), Audi A3 (181)
    • Medium cars under $60,000: Toyota Camry (875), BYD Seal (295), Kia EV4 (55)
    • Medium cars over $60,000: Tesla Model 3 (213), BMW 3 Series (140), Lexus ES (97)
    • Large cars under $70,000: Skoda Superb (10)
    • Large cars over $70,000: Mercedes-Benz E-Class (41), MG IM5 (30), BMW 5 Series (16)
    • Upper large cars: Mercedes-Benz S-Class (8), BMW i7 (6), Bentley Flying Spur (3)
    • People movers under $70,000: Kia Carnival (1321), Hyundai Staria (66), Ford Tourneo (63)
    • People movers over $70,000: Volkswagen ID. Buzz (64), Mercedes-Benz V-Class (38), Zeekr 009 (29)
    • Sports cars under $90,000: Ford Mustang (355), Subaru BRZ (70), Toyota GR86 (56)
    • Sports cars over $90,000: BMW 2 Series Coupe (92), Mercedes-Benz CLE (69), BMW 4 Series two-door range (37)
    • Sports cars over $200,000: Porsche 911 (140), Ferrari two-door range (14), Mercedes-AMG GT (11)
    • Light SUVs: Mazda CX-3 (1218), Toyota Yaris Cross (909), Suzuki Jimny (570)
    • Small SUVs under $45,000: Chery Tiggo 4 (2234), Hyundai Kona (1839), GWM Haval Jolion (1789)
    • Small SUVs over $45,000: BMW X1 (407), Mercedes-Benz GLA (373), Volkswagen T-Roc (282)
    • Medium SUVs under $65,000: Mazda CX-5 (2289), Mitsubishi Outlander (1975), Toyota RAV4 (1757)
    • Medium SUVs over $65,000: BMW X3 (546), Mazda CX-60 (455), Lexus NX (370)
    • Large SUVs under $80,000: Ford Everest (1913), Toyota Prado (1392), Isuzu MU-X (1131)
    • Large SUVs over $80,000: BMW X5 (364), Mercedes-Benz GLE wagon (216), Lexus RX (163)
    • Upper large SUVs under $120,000: Toyota LandCruiser (907), Nissan Patrol (410), Hyundai Ioniq 9 (13)
    • Upper large SUVs over $120,000: Lexus GX (72), BMW X7 (54), Mercedes-Benz GLS (47)
    • Small vans: Volkswagen Caddy (69), Peugeot Partner (23), Renault Kangoo (11)
    • Medium vans: Toyota HiAce (998), Hyundai Staria Load (194), Ford Transit Custom (180)
    • 4×2 utes: Toyota HiLux (525), Isuzu D-Max (405), Mitsubishi Triton (258)
    • 4×4 utes: Ford Ranger (3241), Toyota HiLux (2275), Mitsubishi Triton (1407)

    Sales by category

    Includes Tesla and Polestar sales.

    CategorySalesMarket share
    SUV53,66661.2%
    Light commercial17,99520.5%
    Passenger car13,62315.5%
    Heavy commercial24692.8%

    Top segments by market share

    Includes Tesla and Polestar sales.

    SegmentSalesChange YoY
    Medium SUVs21,771+3.1%
    Small SUVs15,067+4.1%
    4×4 utes13,650-2.9%
    Large SUVs11,426-1.8%
    Small cars5946-7.8%

    Sales by region

    Excludes Tesla and Polestar sales.

    State/territorySalesChange YoY
    New South Wales26,305+2.3%
    Victoria24,222+6.3%
    Queensland18,782-0.7%
    Western Australia8952-12.7%
    South Australia5619-3.0%
    Tasmania1424-0.8%
    Australian Capital Territory1160+2.0%
    Northern Territory628-18.1%

    Sales by buyer type

    Excludes Tesla, Polestar and heavy commercial vehicle sales.

    Buyer typeSalesChange YoY
    Private44,150+0.5%
    Business32,851-2.9%
    Rental5258+47.0%
    Government2364-11.7%

    Sales by fuel or propulsion type

    Excludes heavy commercial vehicle sales.

    Fuel typeSalesYoY change
    Petrol33,144-14.7%
    Diesel24,439-3.7%
    Hybrid15,131+2.0%
    Electric7409+93.3%
    PHEV5161+170.5%

    Sales by country of origin

    Includes Tesla and Polestar sales.

    CountrySalesChange YoY
    Japan22,943-24.6%
    China20,921+62.9%
    Thailand17,072-7.7%
    Korea11,277+3.6%
    Germany4346+20.5%

    MORE: VFACTS 2025: Another record year for new vehicle sales in Australia, but growth modest overall

    William Stopford

    William Stopford

    News Editor

    William Stopford

    News Editor

    William Stopford is an automotive journalist with a passion for mainstream cars, automotive history and overseas auto markets.

    Read more

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