On the Dash:
- New-vehicle sales rose 4.4% year over year in June, reaching a 16.52 million SAAR, according to NADA.
- Hybrid sales jumped 19.4% in the first half of 2026, while BEV sales fell 25.1% over the same span.
- Finance payments hit $813 in June, a record for the month, as more buyers stretch loans past 84 months.
New light-vehicle sales in the United States reached a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 16.52 million units in June 2026, up 4.4% from a year earlier, according to NADA’s latest Market Beat report.
The year-to-date SAAR through June totals 15.9 million units, down 2.8% from the first half of 2025. NADA cautions that comparison is skewed. Buyers rushed to purchase vehicles in early 2025 ahead of tariffs on imported autos and auto parts, pulling sales forward and inflating last year’s first-half totals.
Conventional hybrids kept climbing. First-half hybrid sales reached 1.21 million units, up 19.4% year over year. Hybrid market share hit 15.4%, a gain of 2.9 percentage points from the same period last year. The trend showed up across brands in June, as Toyota, Hyundai, Subaru and Kia all posted sales gains driven by hybrid demand, with Kia’s hybrid sales alone surging 187%.
Battery electric vehicles moved the other way. BEV sales fell 25.1% year over year through the first half of 2026, and BEV market share dropped 1.7 percentage points over that span.
Affordability pressures continue to build. NADA points to recent JD Power estimates showing the average monthly new-vehicle finance payment reached $813 in June, up 3.4% year over year and the highest June payment on record. Average incentive spending per unit rose 12.7% year over year to an estimated $3,217.
More buyers are stretching loan terms to manage those payments. 13.6% of loans now run 84 months or longer, JD Power reports.
The bigger question for the second half is trade policy. As CBT News reported last week, the U.S. will not renew the USMCA in its current form, and talks between the U.S. and Mexico continue through July 20, with no date set for negotiations with Canada. Dealers will be watching how those talks shape pricing and supply through the rest of the year.
Looking ahead to the rest of 2026, NADA’s forecast holds steady at 16.0 million new light-vehicle units.



