Auto Sales Slowdown? Honda CR-V Sets All-Time Monthly Sales Record In July 2016

Timothy Cain
by Timothy Cain

Through the first seven months of 2016, the Honda CR-V is not the best-selling SUV/crossover in America.

This comes as some surprise for a vehicle that led the utility vehicle sector in eight of the last nine years, including each of the last four.

With a 16-percent year-over-year jump to 197,771 units through July, the Toyota RAV4 is the leader of the pack so far this year.

Yet after the RAV4 led the monthly SUV/crossover rundown in each of the first five months of 2016, the Honda CR-V narrowed the gap in June, outselling the RAV4 by 2,250 units to mark a turnaround at the end of the first-half.

Then in July, Honda reported the highest monthly CR-V sales total in the nameplate’s two-decade run.

Chomping away at the RAV4’s year-to-date sales lead — now a 2,679-unit margin with five months remaining — the CR-V was also American Honda’s best-selling model in July.

Despite a 1-percent drop in Honda car sales, a 13-percent decline in Odyssey minivan sales, and an overall industry trend that slowed year-over-year growth to less than 1 percent, Honda reported 4,232 more CR-V sales in July 2016 than in July 2015.

At this point last year, Honda was reporting best-ever July results. One year later, not only was that July record smashed, but American Honda topped the all-time CR-V sales record (set last August) by 4 percent.

The 36,017-unit CR-V sales total reported by American Honda in July 2016 corrected first-half sales figures, which were down by more than 2 percent. Year-to-date, CR-V volume is now level with the figures achieved during the first seven months of 2015. If Honda simply maintains that level of output through the remainder of 2016, the year will end with 346,000 U.S. CR-V sales. In that case, assuming no CR-V sales growth for the rest of 2016, Toyota would need a modest 2-percent year-over-year RAV4 increase for its compact crossover to end 2016 as America’s favourite SUV/crossover for the first time in the model’s history.

We can safely assume that even the auto industry’s slowdown won’t result in RAV4 growth of just 2 percent, nor will we assume that, after a two-month span in which CR-V sales jumped 9 percent, American Honda can’t continue to expand the CR-V’s appeal.

For Honda, the news in other parts of the lineup is largely positive as of late.

The launch of the tenth-generation Civic last winter has resulted in an 18-percent leap forward in U.S. Civic volume, at a time when passenger car volume has tumbled 8 percent across the industry. Despite a 7-percent drop in July, Honda Accord sales are up 6 percent this year. Sales of the discontinued Honda Crosstour and CR-Z are in the toilet. The Honda Fit’s 18-percent drop, valued at 7,149 lost sales, is more than cancelled out by a 23,787-unit uptick in sales of the Fit-based Honda HR-V. In the final year of the current-generation Odyssey’s life-cycle, Honda’s minivan on track to sell more than 120,000 copies for a fifth consecutive year. Short supply constrained Pilot sales through much of early 2016, a 13-percent rise over the last two months suggests the pain may now be mitigated. The launch of the Ridgeline took full effect in July.

The Honda division’s senior vice president and general manager, Jeff Conrad, says, “The strong cadence of new Honda products we continue to bring to market has created extraordinary retail demand that is unprecedented in our history.” Indeed, Honda is now reporting record brand-wide sales on a routine basis.

All is not sunshine and roses, however. Awaiting improved supply of the MDX — revamped for 2017 — and RDX while facing a 13-percent decline in its car division, volume at Honda’s upmarket Acura brand is down 9 percent this year to only 92,668 units through July.

This places Acura on a track for a four-year U.S. sales low of roughly 161,000 sales in 2016, a 23-percent drop since 2005.

[Images: American Honda, Toyota USA, Acura]

Timothy Cain is the founder of GoodCarBadCar.net, which obsesses over the free and frequent publication of U.S. and Canadian auto sales figures. Follow on Twitter @goodcarbadcar and on Facebook.

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  • Zip89123 Zip89123 on Aug 15, 2016

    I'm surprised. CR-V's are slow, noisy, have CVTs, and are expensive if a buyer wants any decent options. Also, I haven't seen a new CR-V on the road in a long time.

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    • ItsJustaRide ItsJustaRide on Aug 16, 2016

      @runs_on_h8raide Whilst evaluating compact CUV options, my wife of 18 years wouldn't even consider the CR-V: "I'll bet it drives as dull as it looks." Of note, her first new car was a '98 Civic DX hatch 5MT (which she traded for a '01 Impreza RS sedan 5MT).

  • CincyDavid CincyDavid on Aug 15, 2016

    I'm driving a '16 CR-V every day. Much better seating position than the Accord and Civic, which is enough to get me onboard the CUV bandwaqon. My only beef with it is that I perceive that its styling may be a little more feminine than, for example, a Rogue. Not a bad little vehicle, and there are great lease deals out there...what's not to like?

    • Bullnuke Bullnuke on Aug 15, 2016

      My ex-wife just bought a new CR-V SE for $24.0k OTD (I helped out by advice for her negotiation technique through one of my daughters) and I even was allowed to drive it. Nice car, suits her fine. When I shut the door after driving it the little car immediately shouted "HONDA" at me by the tinny, echoing sound so familiar to the brand.

  • 1995 SC Wife has a new Ridgeline and it came with 2 years so I don't have to think about it for a while.My FIAT needed a battery (the 12V...not the drive battery), a replacement steering column cover and I had to buy a Tesla Charging adapter to use the destination charger at one of the places I frequent. Also had to replace the charge cable because I am an idiot and ran the stock one over and destroyed the connector. Around 600 bucks all in there but 250 is because of the cable.The Thunderbird has needed much the past year. ABS Pump - 300. Master Cylinder 100. Tool to bleed ABS 350 (Welcome to pre OBD2 electronics), Amp for Stereo -250, Motor mounts 150, Injectors 300, Airbag Module - 15 at the u pull it, Belts and hoses, 100 - Plugs and wires 100, Trans fluid, filter and replacement pan, 150, ignition lock cylinder and rekey - 125, Cassette Player mechanism - 15 bucks at the U Pull it, and a ton of time to do things like replace the grease in the power seat motots (it was hard and the seats wouldn't move when cold), Rear pinion seal - 15 buckjs, Fix a million broken tabs in the dash surround, recap the ride control module and all. My wife would say more, but my Math has me around 2 grand. Still needs an exhaust manifold gasket and the drivers side window acts up from time to time. I do it all but if I were paying someone that would be rough. It's 30 this year though so I roll with it. You'll have times like these running old junk.
  • 3-On-The-Tree Besides for the sake of emissions I don’t understand why the OEM’s went with small displacement twin turbo engines in heavy trucks. Like you guys stated above there really isn’t a MPG advantage. Plus that engine is under stress pulling that truck around then you hit it with turbos, more rpm’s , air, fuel, heat. My F-150 Ecoboost 3.5 went through one turbo replacement and the other was leaking. l’ll stick with my 2021 V8 Tundra.
  • Syke What I'll never understand about economics reporting: $1.1 billion net income is a mark of failure? Anyone with half a brain recognizes that Tesla is slowly settling in to becoming just another EV manufacturer, now that the legacy manufacturers have gained a sense of reality and quit tripping over their own feet in converting their product lines. Who is stupid enough to believe that Tesla is going to remain 90% of the EV market for the next ten years?Or is it just cheap headlines to highlight another Tesla "problem"?
  • Rna65689660 I had an AMG G-Wagon roar past me at night doing 90 - 100. What a glorious sound. This won’t get the same vibe.
  • Marc Muskrat only said what he needed to say to make the stock pop. These aren't the droids you're looking for. Move along.
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