These Were The 10 Best Selling Cars Of 2024

It’s all but a foregone conclusion that the Ford F-Series of pickup trucks will take the title as the best-selling vehicle in America, and 2024’s sales results confirm the victory.
As has been the case for as long as most of us can remember, American buyers flock to pickup trucks like Gordon Ramsay to food-based television shows. So it comes as little surprise that the Chevrolet Silverado lands in second place, too. After those top two, though, there are several noteworthy results.
Top 10 Best Selling Cars 2024 |
---|
1. Ford F-Series (732,139) |
2. Chevrolet Silverado (542,517) |
3. Toyota RAV4 (475,193) |
4. Tesla Model Y (405,900 est) |
5. Honda CR-V (402,791) |
6. Ram pickup (373,120) |
7. GMC Sierra (340,946) |
8. Toyota Camry (309,876) |
9. Nissan Rogue (245,724) |
10. Honda Civic (242,005) |
Ram’s series of pickup trucks fell from third in 2023 to sixth in 2024, followed by the GMC Sierra. The best-selling SUV was the Toyota RAV4, just as it was the prior year. Tesla jumped a spot to take fourth on the list with the Model Y, making it the best-selling electric vehicle in America yet again.
Just two traditional sedans appear in the top 10 list. The Toyota Camry takes the honor as the best-seller in eighth place, in front of the Honda Civic in tenth. While we capped our list at 10 spots, sedan fans may be interested to know that the Toyota Corolla came in 11th, the Honda Accord in 21st and the Nissan Senta in 25th overall.
American buyers purchased around 15.9 million new vehicles in 2024, which Reuters reports is up over 2% from the previous year. Hybrid sales surged 36.7% last year and are expected to stay strong in 2025. General Motors remained the largest American automaker in sales, coming in at 2.7 million in the United States last year.
Become an AutoGuide insider. Get the latest from the automotive world first by subscribing to our newsletter here.

Growing up in a family obsessed with performance and as the son of an automotive engineer, Jeremy Korzeniewski has spent his entire life as a car enthusiast. Also an avid motorcyclist, Jeremy has spent the last two decades writing about the transportation industry and providing insights to many of the largest automotive publications in the world.
More by Jeremy Korzeniewski
Comments
Join the conversation
Ford #1? Yes, but if you add Chevy + GMC general Motors out sold Ford by 151,000 units. It makes sense to look at it that way as the trucks are virtually identical and co e off the same assembly line