December 2011 Sports Car Sales Chart Click Any Chart For A Larger View |
2011's German roadster contest was won by the BMW Z4. Not far behind was the Mercedes-Benz SLK. Combined, Porsche's Boxster and Cayman found 3150 U.S. buyers. The Audi TT surged at the end of the year but wasn't a candidate for German roadster sales leadership.
The best-selling American muscle car in America was the Chevrolet Camaro. The Camaro beat the Ford Mustang by an astonishing 17,811 sales in 2011. The Mustang range is better than ever, but sales slid 4.4% last year.
There's one other car, besides the S2000, appearing in this month's first sporty car sales table that doesn't normally show up. Subaru USA broke down the Impreza's total sales, providing us with a chance to see how the WRX measures up. There are no Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution numbers with which to compare the WRX's (if you know where Evo sales figures can be found, do share), but the WRX did end 2011 with more sales than the... Chevrolet Corvette. Although the WRX reported a terrific year-over-year improvement, the Subaru still couldn't compete with the Volkswagen Golf GTI in terms of outright volume.
Keep scrolling for a look at the sales results of higher-priced sporting automobiles in the United States. Use the dropdown menu in the top right of this page to find specific monthly and yearly sales figures for any model currently on sale in North America.
Sporty Car | December 2011 | % Change | 2011 | YTD % Change |
Audi A5 | 1273 | - 12.5% | 15,385 | - 6.1% |
Audi TT | 216 | + 238% | 2236 | + 46% |
BMW Z4 | 299 | + 51.0% | 3479 | - 8.5% |
Chevrolet Camaro | 6754 | + 20.3% | 88,249 | + 8.5% |
Chevrolet Corvette | 1038 | + 6.0% | 13,164 | + 4.3% |
Dodge Challenger | 3284 | - 1.4% | 39,534 | + 7.5% |
Ford Mustang | 5057 | - 7.2% | 70,438 | - 4.4% |
Honda CR-Z | 564 | - 35.6% | 11,330 | + 116% |
Honda S2000 | 2 | + 100% | 5 | - 94.1% |
Hyundai Veloster | 2188 | ----- | 9284 | ----- |
Mazda MX-5 Miata | 339 | - 3.7% | 5674 | - 10.9% |
Mazda RX-8 | 26 | - 72.6% | 759 | - 33.1% |
Mercedes-Benz SLK | 266 | + 133% | 3220 | + 62.6% |
Mitsubishi Eclipse | 165 | - 30.7% | 7546 | + 76.2% |
Nissan 370Z | 449 | - 38.2% | 7328 | - 28.3% |
Porche Boxster | 38 | - 72.3% | 1773 | - 18.6% |
Porsche Cayman | 67 | - 40.2% | 1377 | + 4.2% |
Scion tC | 1587 | - 0.4% | 22,433 | + 47.5% |
Subaru Impreza WRX | 1257 | - 5.6% | 13,805 | + 65.9% |
Volkswagen Eos | 419 | + 16.7% | 7533 | + 12.6% |
Volkswagen GTI | 1332 | + 24.6% | 16,867 | + 22.6% |
Volvo C70 | 274 | + 20.7% | 4933 | + 12.9% |
December 2011 Premium Sports Car Sales Chart Click Any Chart For A Larger View |
Because of the BMW 6-Series's gigantic year-over-year boost, the R8 didn't come close to matching the 6er's total, either. BMW's 723 6-Series sales in December helped it to a 911-crushing experience, but year-to-date figures show the 911 to be America's favourite premium sports cars. And the new 911 will be an even better car. Audi would need a much-less expensive R8 model to compete with Porsche's basic Carrera and the 911's incredible sales totals.
December was the best month yet for the Lexus LFA. You'll also notice the Cadillac XLR in the table. It's there just to show its 12 2011 sales - no XLRs were sold in December. Nissan's GT-R beat the Audi R8 by 149 sales in 2011. The Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG was an increasingly popular proposition; the Mercedes-Benz SL and CL less so. And Dodge Viper sales shot up to 36 in December. Dodge must be finding leftover Vipers in the same lot Honda's finding S2000s.
Premium Sporty Car | December 2011 | % Change | 2011 | YTD % Change |
Audi R8 | 133 | + 11.8% | 1145 | + 43.3% |
BMW 6-Series | 723 | + 933% | 3903 | + 61.4% |
Cadillac XLR | ----- | - 100% | 12 | - 93.6% |
Dodge Viper | 36 | + 50.0% | 197 | - 49.7% |
Jaguar XK | 152 | + 14.3% | 1738 | - 18.7% |
Lexus LFA | 10 | ----- | 62 | ----- |
Mercedes-Benz CL-Class | 57 | - 59.0% | 943 | - 8.9% |
Mercedes-Benz SL-Class | 99 | - 42.8% | 1449 | - 39.2% |
Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG | 86 | + 79.2% | 722 | + 44.7% |
Nissan GT-R | 35 | - 7.9% | 1294 | + 47.5% |
Porsche 911 | 423 | - 16.9% | 6016 | + 4.9% |
Clearly GoodCarBadCar is not suggesting that the cars in the two tables above are all direct competitors. Establishing categories among cars as unique as even the Audi TT and Porsche Boxster has never pleased a single reader, so cars have been lumped together so you can simply see how buyers looking for sports cars, roadsters, hot hatches, convertibles, GTs, and wanna-be sports cars spend their money. Greater categorization of cars would only lead to problems that automakers create by not isolating model-specific sales figures: we don't know how many M3s BMW has sold or how many Civics are Si models, for example. The numbers we do have are listed above.
Related From GoodCarBadCar.net
Sporty Car & Premium Sporty Car Sales In America - December & 2012 Year End
Sporty Car & Premium Sporty Car Sales In America - January 2012
Sporty Car & Premium Sporty Car Sales In America - November 2011
Sporty Car & Premium Sporty Car Sales In America - 2010 Year End
Top 30 Best-Selling Luxury Vehicles In America - 2011 Year End
U.S. Auto Sales By Brand - 2011 Year End
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