Top 10: Irish car sales 2021

104,932 new cars were registered in Ireland during 2021. Although that figure represented a healthy rise of 18.8% compared to 2020’s total of 88,325, it was still short of the 117,109 deliveries achieved in pre-pandemic 2019.

Significantly, the past twelve months saw an increased demand for electrified models. Indeed, battery-electric vehicles, plug-in hybrids and ‘self-charging’ hybrids together accounted for just over a third of all sales, putting them on a par with traditional diesel and petrol offerings.

Cumulative Ireland Car Registrations (2021 Q4) By Powertrain Type

Cumulative Ireland Car Registrations (2021 Q4) By Powertrain Mix

In terms of individual models, the country’s clear favourite was the Hyundai Tucson (5,467 units and a 5.2% market share). The Toyota Corolla (4,361 units / 4.2% share) was runner-up, while the Toyota Yaris (2,702 units / 2.6% share) took third place ahead of the Volkswagen Tiguan (2,670 units / 2.5% share).

Cumulative Ireland Car Registrations (2021 Q4) By Model

Toyota (13,053 units / 12.4% share) became the leading manufacturer, relegating Volkswagen (12,617 units / 12.0% share) to second spot. Hyundai (10,740 units / 10.2% share) completed the podium positions.

Cumulative Ireland Car Registrations (2021 Q4) By Manufacturer

Some brands managed to grow well in excess of the industry average. Heading up this top ten list was newcomer Cupra (184 units / 0.2% share), but arguably the most meaningful performances came from Opel (2,749 units / 2.7% share) and BMW (4,457 units / 4.2% share).

Cumulative Ireland Car Registrations (2021 Q4) Top Ten Winners

By contrast, 2021 was a year to forget for other marques. Nissan (4,854 units / 4.6% share) especially stands out, because it recorded the largest absolute volume reduction.

Cumulative Ireland Car Registrations (2021 Q4) Top Ten Losers

Related post:
Top 10: Irish car sales 2020 - winners and losers

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