Lincoln sales in the United States increased 115 percent to 10,468 units during April of 2021.
Individual model sales performance was as follows:
During the first four months of the 2021 calendar year, U.S. Lincoln sales increased 18 percent to 35,878 units.
Model | April 2021 / April 2021 | April 2021 | April 2020 | YTD 2021 / YTD 2020 | YTD 2021 | YTD 2020 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total | +114.9% | 10,468 | 4,870 | +17.9% | 35,878 | 30,431 |
Aviator | +193.8% | 2,844 | 968 | +34.6% | 8,930 | 6,634 |
Continental | -25.9% | 258 | 348 | -46.3% | 1,026 | 1,911 |
Corsair | +141.7% | 2,821 | 1,167 | +45.3% | 9,935 | 6,837 |
MKZ | -56.7% | 267 | 617 | -63.3% | 1,505 | 4,099 |
Nautilus | +164.3% | 2,609 | 987 | +28.1% | 7,981 | 6,232 |
Navigator | +114.2% | 1,669 | 779 | +41.2% | 6,501 | 4,605 |
Lincoln sales in the United States rose dramatically in April, representing the second consecutive monthly increase for the luxury brand in its home market. The substantial 115 percent jump during April was the result of a natural recovery from April 2020, which was the first full month of sales after the onset of restrictions and stay-at-home orders as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The strong sales increase experienced by FoMoCo’s luxury arm in April was the result of strong utility vehicle sales. In fact, Lincoln utilities (SUVs and crossovers) posted triple-digit increases in April, led by the new Aviator, which displaced the Corsair as the most popular model in the portfolio.
Exclusive to - you guessed it - the Lariat trim.
Perhaps a bit more affordable than the real thing.
An option for light, dark, and in-between.
Picking right up where she left off.
Red and white: a simple, classic color combo.