by Bruce Walker
Buying a used car in the Midwest got a little more affordable in May over the previous month.
The good news is that year-over-year price increases in used vehicles in May dropped seven percentage points from the year-over-year April price increases, from April’s 23.9% to May’s 16.9%. The bad news is a used car and truck in May 2022 still cost 16.9% more than a comparable used vehicle cost in May 2021.
Major cities in the Midwest are among those hardest hit by increased used car prices between May 2021 and May 2022.
Ranked in the iSeeCars Top 50 cities are:
- Minneapolis/St. Paul, ranked seventh with a 18.7% increase, or average $5,443 May year-over-year increase.
- Grand Rapids/Kalamazoo, ranked 27th with a 15.8% increase, or average $4,466 May year-over-year increase.
- Milwaukee, ranked 39th with a 12.7% increase, or average $3,659 May year-over-year increase.
- Detroit, ranked 48th with a 8.8% increase, or average $2,632 May year-over-year increase.
According to iSeeCars’ analysts, San Antonio had the smallest price increase at 5.4%, while New York had the greatest used car price increase at 28.3%.
Year-over-year prices of used cars continue to rise, according to iSeeCars.com, largely due to a shortage of new vehicles on the market as automakers struggle to find the microchips for all the amenities customers have come to expect.
That’s still on average $4,953 more for a used vehicle purchased in May of this year over May 2021. Not surprisingly, the spike in gasoline prices has increased consumer interest in electric vehicles and hybrids, which has increased the resale price of both vehicle categories a whopping 37.7% and 32.1%, respectively.
“While used car prices have seen minor decreases for the fourth consecutive month, prices remain elevated due to lingering supply constraints,” iSeeCars executive analyst Karl Brauer said in a statement. “We are also seeing a significant increase in demand for used hybrid and electric vehicles as a result of high gas prices, with the cost of electrics increasing by 37.7% and hybrid cars increasing by 32.1% compared to last year.”
iSeeCars analyzed approximately 2 million used car sales, comparing sales conducted in May 2021 and May 2022. The analysis only included sales of cars between one- and five-years old, and excluded heavy-duty, low-volume or vehicles discontinued as of the 2022 model year, and vehicles with fewer than four of the five model years for each period.
Even though Detroit ranked near the bottom of the iSeeCars’ ranking, it still notes that Motor City buyers of used Porsche Cayennes paid on average $38,176 more for the car in May 2022 than they did in May 2021.
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Bruce Walker is a regional editor at The Center Square. He previously worked as editor at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy’s MichiganScience magazine and The Heartland Institute’s InfoTech & Telecom News.
Photo “Used Cars for Sale” by Bassets Honda CC4.0.