Hybrids prove a hit with Irish buyers but new car market down

CSO figures show new car market down 6.9% while used imports drop 12.1% this year

Hybrids have proved to be the biggest hit with Irish new car buyers, up 70 per cent on last year to 5,674
Hybrids have proved to be the biggest hit with Irish new car buyers, up 70 per cent on last year to 5,674

The number of new cars taxed for the first time fell 6.5 per cent last month to 12,263, with used imports down 18.3 per cent to 8,674.

According to new figures from the Central Statistics Office (CSO), 33,928 new cars were taxed for the first time during the first two months of 2020, a drop of 6.9 per cent on the same period last year. There was also a significant drop in the total used cars imported so far this year, down 12.1 per cent at 19,391.

The fall in used car imports follows the introduction of a tax on new and used cars based on their Nitrogen Oxide (NOx) emissions, which particularly hits older used imports.

Hybrids have proved to be the biggest hit with Irish new car buyers, up 70 per cent on last year to 5,674. They remain well ahead of full-electric cars, which were up 3 per cent on the same two months of last year at 1,018. However, diesel remains the most popular choice, even though it is down 19 per cent at 14,327, while the number of new petrol cars also fell, by 11 per cent to 12,909.

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Toyota is the biggest car brand so far this year with 5,858 cars taxed for the first time, ahead of Volkswagen with 5,112, Hyundai with 4,378 and Ford with 4,273. In the premium market, Audi leads with 2,718, ahead of BMW with 2,384 and Mercedes-Benz with 2,159.

Michael McAleer

Michael McAleer

Michael McAleer is Motoring Editor, Innovation Editor and an Assistant Business Editor at The Irish Times