Cars Registrations SMMT News

New car colours – are buyers becoming more conservative?

26 September 2005 #Cars #Registrations #SMMT News

  • Huge rise in number of black and grey car cars leaving showrooms last year.
  • Red cars fall out of favour; silver still number one choice for new car buyers.
  • Most common colour of car on British roads (any age) is blue. 1.6 million more than second placed silver.
  • 23,524 multi-coloured cars on GB roads at the end of 2004. Just 4,184 pink cars.

New car market by colour:

Black and grey are now the colour of choice for one in four of new car buyers. That’s according to latest motorparc figures released today by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT). Last year saw a surge in the number of black and grey cars leaving showrooms compared to 2003. Meanwhile, the number of new red cars has halved since 1998.

New car volumes by colour 2004 v 2003,

2004

2003

Percentage change

1

Silver

823,000

836,000

– 1.6 %

2

Blue

585,000

616,000

– 5.3 %

3

Black

436,000

383,000

+13.8 %

4

Grey

244,000

204,000

+19.6 %

5

Red

201,000

236,000

– 14.8 %

6

Green

117,000

176,000

– 33.5 %

SMMT chief executive Christopher Macgowan commented, ‘One hundred years ago, Henry Ford said you could buy the model T in any colour as long as it was black. Today, new car buyers have more model and colour choice than at any time in the past. But now black is increasingly the colour of choice, rather than of necessity.’

New car sales by colour 1998

1

Blue

592,000

2

Red

446,000

3

Silver

381,000

4

Green

350,000

5

Black

150,000

6

White

125,000

Colour of cars of all ages on GB roads:

Blue dominates the British car parc. Of 29.4 million models running at the end of 2004, there were 1.6 million more blue models than of second-placed silver (7.3 v 5.7 million). Back in 1997, the picture was different. Of 25.6 million cars on the road, red was the most common colour, with silver down the league in fifth place with just over two million examples nation-wide.

Christopher Macgowan added, ‘The colour of the political landscape may have turned red since 1997 but the car parc has taken a turn for the blue.’

2004

1997

1

Blue

7,302,931

6,284,838

2

Silver

5,681,521

2,068,196

3

Red

5,402,009

6,733,640

4

Green

3,344,745

2,275,329

5

Black

2,671,945

1,388,158

6

White

1,914,116

3,561,778

7

Grey

1,843,012

1,508,863

8

Gold

260,747

388,288

9

Purple

217,825

144,735

10

Yellow

206,917

158,041


Other colours – cars on the road, year end 2004

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