
Edmunds: What you need to know about rising used car prices
Many people expected used car prices to cool off as new vehicle production recovered post-pandemic. But as the latest data shows, that's not happening just yet — and shoppers should understand why.
What's driving used car price increases?
The root cause of today's high used car prices is limited supply. Edmunds found that the average age of trade-in vehicles was 7.6 years during the first quarter of 2025. That's the oldest average since 2019, meaning fewer 'near-new' vehicles — like lease returns or late-model trade-ins — are entering the used market.
With fewer low-mileage recent-model-year vehicles available, shoppers compete for a smaller pool of in-demand inventory. That competition keeps prices high, particularly for popular models.
Tariffs, too, can influence demand for used cars. True, used cars aren't directly subject to tariffs. But higher new-car pricing because of tariffs will undoubtedly force some additional people to consider buying a used car as a more affordable alternative.
Slowing down in a tight market
Another sign of the shifting market: The average used vehicle spent 38 days on a dealer's lot before being sold in the first three months of this year. That's the longest time Edmunds has recorded since early 2021.
This slower pace suggests both buyers and sellers are approaching the market cautiously. Dealers may be holding firm on pricing, knowing supply is tight. At the same time, the reduced pace may also indicate that buyers are taking longer to find the right match in a smaller market.
Should you buy now or wait?
Deciding whether to buy now or hold off depends on your situation. If you need a vehicle immediately, it still makes sense to shop — but it's important to be realistic. Don't expect dramatic deals or fast-moving price cuts. Instead, look for well-maintained models with strong reliability records, and be open to adjusting your expectations regarding extras and options.
There's a chance more inventory will reach the market later in 2025. Edmunds' data shows that dealers are still short on fresh trade-ins, but that could change as new vehicle production stabilizes and more consumers upgrade their cars. A modest increase in the used supply could help ease pricing pressure.
Still, it's unlikely that prices will return to pre-2020 levels. The industry continues to feel the effects of pandemic-era production cuts, and even a return to more typical production levels won't immediately solve the current imbalance between supply and demand.
What you can do to get the best deal
Shoppers can take smart steps to get more value in today's market. For starters, flexibility is key. Expanding your search radius to neighboring regions can open up more options. Considering less popular trims, colors or brands can also help you find better pricing.
Certified pre-owned vehicles may carry a slight premium, but they often include extended warranties and thorough inspections. That added security can be worth it — especially when prices are high and buyers are more concerned than ever about getting a good value.
It also helps to be informed. Online tools and data can help you track average prices, check vehicle histories, and compare models across categories. Knowing what's typical for the car you want gives you a stronger position when it's time to negotiate.
Edmunds says
The used car market in 2025 is anything but predictable. Inventory is still recovering from pandemic-era disruptions, and both shoppers and dealers are tightening the purse strings. For buyers, that means patience, planning and flexibility are more important than ever.
If you need to buy now, being open to alternatives to your ideal car may help uncover better value. And if you're able to wait, keeping a close eye on market conditions may give you an edge when inventory improves.
____
This story was provided to The Associated Press by the automotive website Edmunds. Josh Jacquot is a contributor at Edmunds.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
25 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Japan walks line between recession and submission as it seeks to overcome Trump tariffs
It all seemed to be going so well. In April, Japan's chief trade negotiator, Ryosei Akazawa, sat opposite Donald Trump in the Oval Office after 'positive and constructive' talks, sporting a Maga baseball cap and giving a thumbs up for the cameras. Japan's economic revitalisation minister drew criticism back home for the gesture, forcing him to insist there was 'no political significance' behind it. But the backdrop to the offending photo was far more significant than the uncomfortable optics. Akazawa's trade delegation was in Washington to begin tariff negotiations with its American counterparts that officials in Tokyo were initially optimistic would end with Japan's exemption from Trump's most egregious protectionist instincts. 'A Great Honor to have just met with the Japanese Delegation on Trade,' Trump wrote on Truth Social after meeting Akazawa. 'Big Progress!' Eleven weeks and seven rounds of talks later, Japan and the US have reached an impasse, with Trump unleashing on his country's most important ally in the Asia-Pacific the kind of invective he once reserved for China and the European Union: 'They won't take our RICE, and yet they have a massive rice shortage,' he wrote online, adding it showed 'how spoiled countries have become'. The friction is beginning to seep into other parts of the bilateral relationship, with Tokyo and Washington at odds, to varying degrees, on the cost of hosting American troops in Japan and recent attacks by the US and Israel on Iran. To add insult to injury, the chasm that has opened up between Tokyo and Washington on trade came as the US agreed to slash reciprocal tariffs on Vietnamese imports from 46% to 20%. Japan now has just days before the end of Trump's 90-day pause on the imposition of punishing tariffs to pull off a breakthrough. Much will depend on Akazawa's ability to convince American negotiators to withdraw or reduce a 25% levy on Japanese cars imposed in April. That is on top of a possible rise in reciprocal duties on other Japanese goods to 24% from the current baseline of 10%. But if anything, the mood music from Washington indicates that Trump is even less inclined to make concessions ahead of the president's second tariff 'liberation day', despite constant reminders from senior politicians in Tokyo of the value Japan brings to the US economy. They include the prime minister, Shigeru Ishiba, who noted this week that Japan is the largest foreign investor in the US and its biggest contributor in terms of job creation. 'Our hope is that this will be taken into consideration,' he said. Just days earlier, Trump had framed Japan in terms that prompted as much consternation as anger on this side of the Pacific. Speaking to reporters on Air Force One, he floated the idea of raising tariffs on imports from Japan to 30% or 35%, and bemoaned its consumers' lack of enthusiasm for American cars and rice. 'I'm not sure we're going to make a deal. I doubt it,' Trump said, labelling Japan 'very tough' and 'very spoiled'. Japan has much to lose if it fails to secure an extension to the deadline on reciprocal tariffs or convince the US to lower duties. The US is Japan's second-biggest trading partner after China, with exports to the US totalling $148.2bn last year. Trade between the two countries was worth an estimated $227.9bn last year, while the autos sector is already suffering from existing tariffs, with exports to the US dropping 25% in May compared to a year ago. That will not put the brakes on Trump's mission to hack away at Japan's $68bn trade surplus with the US – hence his recent demands that it increase imports of US oil and other goods. The trade row has landed Ishiba and his government in a predicament every bit as sticky as the early-summer heat and humidity blanketing Japan. Battered by funding scandals, soaring rice prices and a cost-of-living crisis, Ishiba's administration is limping into the campaign for upper house elections on 20 July, nine months after his Liberal Democratic party (LDP) and its junior coalition partner lost their majority in the lower house. Any inkling that Tokyo is prepared to bend to Trump's demands will not go down well with voters, while analysts warn that the economic impact of accepting higher tariffs could push the Japanese economy – the world's fifth biggest – into recession. Japan's rice crisis has also become a point of contention, as the government attempts to bring down prices with the release of almost all of its 1m tonnes of stockpiled grain, along with a rise in cheaper imports. Japan has imported historically high volumes of US rice in recent months, and yet despite Trump's threats, is reluctant to agree to anything that would ignite anger among rice farmers – a politically influential group in the LDP. Washington is also pressuring Japan to boost imports of other US farm products, as well as cars and oil, to help reduce the trade deficit. Japan has declined to comment on Trump's threat to impose even higher tariffs, saying it would pursue 'sincere' bilateral talks. 'We are aware of what President Trump said, but we don't comment on every remark made by US government officials,' the deputy chief cabinet secretary, Kazuhiko Aoki, said this week 'We intend to advance bilateral talks in a sincere and faithful manner toward reaching an agreement that will benefit both Japan and the United States.' Tariffs, though, are putting strain on what the former US ambassador to Tokyo, Mike Mansfield, once described as the 'most important bilateral relationship in the world, bar none'. After failing to make progress with Trump during a meeting at the G7 in Canada last month, Ishiba abruptly cancelled plans to attend the Nato summit in The Hague – a move analysts attributed to ongoing friction over trade. Japan also declined to offer full-throated support for the US attacks on Iran, saying only that it 'understood' Washington's determination to halt Tehran's nuclear weapons programme. This week, the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, called off his first visit to Japan and South Korea, saying he was needed in Washington for talks with the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. Amid rumours that he is preparing to make yet another trip to Washington this weekend, Akazawa has limited room for manoeuvre – and precious little time, according to analysts. 'Practical and electoral constraints will prevent Japan from offering major concessions on autos, rice, and oil, with negotiators set to continue their slow-and-steady approach,' said James Brady, vice-president of the political risk advisory firm Teneo. 'The probability of a deal being reached before next week's [tariff] deadline appears increasingly low.'


BBC News
42 minutes ago
- BBC News
I understand what Donald Trump cares about, says Keir Starmer
Sir Keir Starmer has said he "understands what anchors" US President Donald Trump, having built a relationship on shared family "different political backgrounds" the prime minister said he found common ground with Trump, and that their "good personal relationship" helped land a vital US tariff on BBC Radio 4's Political Thinking programme, Sir Keir revealed Trump reached out to console him after the death of his younger brother Nick Starmer on Boxing Day."For both of us, we really care about family and there's a point of connection there," he said."I think I do understand what anchors the president, what he really cares about." Sir Keir revealed he first spoke to Trump as prime minister after the then-presidential candidate was shot at a rally in July last year."That was a phone call really to ask him how it was, and in particular I wanted to know how it impacted on his family," he added that Trump later called him after the death of his brother. "We talked about my brother, and he was asking about him," Sir Keir said. Sir Keir denied this week's painful series of U-turns on welfare reforms were because he had been too focused on foreign affairs and "taken his eye off the ball" Tuesday, the government avoided defeat on its proposals to overhaul disability benefits by offering late concessions to Labour MPs threatening to prime minister said he took responsibility for the episode, admitting it had been a "tough" few days but insisting the government would "come through this stronger" after a period of reflection. The prime minister said forging close ties with figures such as Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron were "always in the national interest"."Building those relationships with international leaders is hugely important," he said. The prime minister said the personal rapport had helped secure a deal removing UK industries from some of the sweeping tariffs announced by the deal he said he had seen "anxiety writ large" on the faces of British factory workers at Jaguar Land Rover in Solihull."After the deal, the relief was palpable," he said. Sir Keir said discussions "over a glass of wine" with Macron on a train to Kyiv had also paved the way for a new agreement with the EU, which he claimed would lead to lower food prices in British supermarkets. "That is a good thing for millions of people across the country," he Keir is due to meet Macron again next week as the French president comes to the UK for a state small boat crossings will be a key point of discussion, after Downing Street said last month the situation in the English Channel was "deteriorating".Official figures released this week showed nearly 20,000 people arrived in the UK in the first half of this year by crossing the Channel in small boats - up 48% on the same period last year. Sign up for our Politics Essential newsletter to keep up with the inner workings of Westminster and beyond.


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Gold heads for weekly gain as US tax-cut bill stokes fiscal worries
July 4 (Reuters) - Gold edged up on Friday, poised for a weekly gain as U.S. President Donald Trump's tax-cut and spending bill passed in Congress, raising fiscal concerns. Spot gold rose 0.1% to $3,329.67 per ounce, as of 0221 GMT. Bullion is up 1.7% this week. U.S. gold futures inched down 0.1% at $3,339.30. Trump's tax-cut legislation cleared its final hurdle in the U.S. Congress on Thursday, which will fund his immigration crackdown, make his 2017 tax cuts permanent and deliver new tax breaks that he promised during his 2024 campaign. Through this bill "we're not making any progress on getting our fiscal house in order here in the U.S., so in longer run, it should be bearish for the dollar and bullish for gold," Marex analyst Edward Meir said. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates the legislation would add $3.4 trillion over a decade to the nation's $36.2 trillion debt. Meanwhile, the labor market data on Thursday showed U.S. firms added a more-than-expected 147,000 jobs in June and the unemployment rate unexpectedly fell to 4.1%, bolstering the case for the Federal Reserve to hold interest rates steady. Trump announced that letters specifying tariff rates on imports would begin being sent out Friday, signaling a shift from earlier pledges to negotiate individual trade deals. "If Trump is very insistent on July 9 being a drop-dead date and he imposes these tariffs again, the dollar will certainly weaken and we could see gold moving higher," Meir said. On April 2, Trump announced reciprocal tariffs of 10%-50%, later reducing most rates to 10% until July 9 to allow for negotiations. Non-yielding bullion, considered a safe-haven asset during geopolitical and economic uncertainties, tends to perform well in a low-interest-rate environment. Spot silver fell 0.5% to $36.66 per ounce, platinum rose 0.7% to $1,376.67 and palladium fell 0.6% to $1,130.60.