| Consensus | Consensus Range | Actual | Previous | |
| Total Vehicle Sales - Annual Rate | 16.0M | 15.9M to 17.25M | 16.5M | 16.1M |
| North American-Made Sales - Annual Rate | 12.7M | 12.4M |
Highlights
Sales of motor vehicles ran at a 16.5 million unit seasonally adjusted annual rate in June compared to 16.1 million units in May and 15.8 million units in June 2025.The June pace was above the consensus of 16.1 million units in the Econoday survey of forecasters. Sales of domestically produced motor vehicles is up to 12.7 million units in June from 12.4 million units in May and 12.4 million units a year ago. Domestically produced motor vehicles account for 77 percent of all units sold.
Sales of passenger cards are little changed at 2.699 million units in June from 2.655 million units in May. Sales of light trucks inclusive of minivans, SUVs, and crossovers rose to 13.824 million units in June from 13.425 million units in May. Sales of light trucks account for 84 percent of total sales.
The sales pace for heavy trucks mainly for businesses are unchanged at 426,000 in June from May, but slightly below the 453,000 unit pace in June 2025.
Market Consensus Before Announcement
Another flat reading is expected with sales at an annual 16.0 million in June after 16.1 million in May.
Definition
Unit sales of motor vehicles, published by the Bureau of Economic Analysis at the beginning of each month, include domestic sales and imports. Domestics are sales of autos produced in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico. Imports are U.S. sales of vehicles produced elsewhere. The data track all passenger cars and light trucks up to 14,000 pounds gross weight (including minivans and sport utility vehicles). Though totals include a relatively small portion sold to businesses, motor vehicle sales are good indicators of trends in consumer spending and often are considered a leading indicator at business cycle turning points.
Description
Since motor vehicle sales are an important element of consumer spending, market players watch this closely to get a handle on the direction of the economy. The pattern of consumption spending is one of the foremost influences on stock and bond markets. Strong economic growth translates to healthy corporate profits and higher stock prices. The bond market focus is on whether economic growth goes overboard and leads to inflation. Ideally, the economy walks that fine line between strong growth and excessive (inflationary) growth. This balance was achieved through much of the nineties. For this reason alone, investors in the stock and bond markets enjoyed huge gains during the bull market of the 1990s.
Retail sales growth did slow down in tandem with the equity market during the 2001 recession but then, boosted by a low interest rate environment, rose sharply through 2007 before falling sharply during the Great Recession. Sales then recovered and, once again boosted by low rates, began a long period of steady and favorable growth.
In a more specific sense, auto and truck sales show market conditions for auto makers and the slew of auto-related companies. These figures can influence particular stock prices and provide insight to investment opportunities in this industry. Given that most consumers borrow money to buy cars or trucks, sales also reflect confidence in current and future economic conditions.