How many vehicles sold last month?
Measure and analyze the global car sales market performance in (near) real-time, starting on day one following the close of the month.
Hover over any country to see last month’s vehicle sales volume. Click on a filter to isolate electrified versus ICE.
Customer Logins
Obtain the data you need to make the most informed decisions by accessing our extensive portfolio of information, analytics, and expertise. Sign in to the product or service center of your choice.
Customer LoginsGlobal Auto Demand Tracker
The impact of COVID-19 on the automotive industry is significant, causing a collapse in automotive demand.
The S&P Global Global Auto Demand Tracker helps to understand which automotive market is still in decline and which is rebounding. We leverage the most up-to-date global car vehicle data for the last calendar month for 150+ countries.
The Global Auto Demand Tracker is updated daily with global car sales and/ or registrations by country. The Global Auto Demand Tracker enables automakers and their national sales organisations to monitor which markets are in crisis, which are developing, and how quickly they are recovering. It also reveals which brands are suffering the most in terms of volume and market share.
Immediately upon arrival, data for the last calendar month is turned around on a rolling basis. When actual data are not yet publicly available, the tracker is enhanced with estimates from the S&P Global Sales Operations Forecast to provide immediate insights.
The Global Auto Demand Tracker is available at both a brand- and model-level. Data include:
- 150+ countries
- 350+ makes/brands
- Fuel-type (BEV, FCV, HEV, ICE, MEV, Plug-in)
- Make-model (Audi: A1, A3, A4 …, BMW: 1-Series, 2-Series, …)
- Registration type (Passenger Cars, Light Commercial Vehicles)
- Body-type level (Car, MPV, Pickup, Sport, SUV, Van, Others)
- Seasonally adjusted (SA) and seasonally adjusted annualized rate (SAAR)
- Views include year-over-year and month-over-month to track emergence of countries from the state of crisis