Ford Motor Company has sold millions of vehicles across its century-plus in existence, with many of them continuing to populate U.S. roads on a regular basis. That’s not a huge surprise to anyone, but it is always interesting to see how Ford – as both an automaker and a brand – stacks up against its rivals in that regard. In that realm – at least, in terms of individual automotive brands – there were more Ford models on American roads in Q2 2025 than any of its rivals, too.
This news comes to us from Experian’s Q2 2025 Automotive Market Trends Report, which reveals that Ford branded vehicles accounted for 14.6 percent of all models on U.S. roads in the second quarter, which was the most of any brand. Ford was followed by its cross-town rival Chevrolet a 13.3 percent, Toyota (13 percent), Honda (8.5 percent), Nissan (5.8 percent), Dodge/Ram (5.7 percent), Jeep (4.3 percent), GMC (3.8 percent), Hyundai (3.5 percent), Subaru (3 percent), Kia (2.9 percent), Lexus (1.9 percent), Mercedes-Benz (1.9 percent), BMW (1.9 percent), Volkswagen (1.8 percent), Mazda (1.8 percent), Buick (1.3 percent), Chrysler (1.3 percent), Cadillac (1.1 percent), and Acura (1 percent).
This new data is particularly interesting as the same report reveals that Ford Motor Company fell to second place in terms of accounting for the most vehicles on U.S. roads by automaker, as Ford Authority recently reported. FoMoCo has previously ranked atop the same list on multiple occasions in the past – in fact, back in Q3 2024, The Blue Oval was first at 14.7 percent. Ford also ranked first at the conclusion of 2023 by accounting for 14.7 percent of the market, but recent trends show that it has lost a bit of ground to its cross-town rival, GM, and it was overtaken in the second quarter as a result.
In Q2, Ford accounted for 15.6 percent of that total. That ranked it second behind only GM, which topped the list at 20.3 percent. Otherwise, Ford ranked just ahead of Toyota (15.2 percent), as well as Stellantis (11.5 percent), Honda (9.5 percent), Renault-Nissan (7.1 percent), Hyundai (3.6 percent), Subaru (3.0 percent), Kia (2.9 percent), Volkswagen (2.8 percent), BMW (2.1 percent), Daimler (1.9 percent), and Mazda (1.8 percent).
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