New car registrations in Mayo ahead of national average year to date

The Society of the Irish Motor Industry (SIMI) has today released the official 221 new vehicle registration figures for April.

New car registrations for April were up 10.3% (7,886) when compared to April 2021 (7,147). Registrations year to date are up 4.7% (57,776) on the same period last year (55,177) but are 20.9% behind (73,030) pre-Covid levels.

In Mayo, new car registrations from January to April (1,112) are up 9.66% on the same period last year (1,014).

Elsewhere, light commercials vehicles (LCVs) are down 31.8% (1,626) compared to April last year (2,383) and year to date are down 19.9% (10,992), while heavy goods vehicles (HGVs) registrations are down 36.1% (209) in comparison to April 2021 (327) and year to date are down 15.9% (1,030).

Used car imports for April (4,223) have seen a decrease of 25.6% on April 2021 (5,676). Year to date, imports are down 34.2% (15,864) on 2021 (24,095).

For the month of April, 1,286 new electric vehicles were registered compared to 590 in April 2021. So far this year, 7,524 new electric cars have been registered in comparison to 3,406 on the same period 2021.

Electric vehicle, plug-in hybrids and hybrids continue to increase in popularity, with a combined market share now of 43.89%. Petrol continues to remain dominant at 27.23%, while diesel accounts for 26.40%, hybrid 23.56%, electric 13.02% and plug-in electric hybrid 7.31%.

Commenting on the new vehicle registration figures, Brian Cooke, director general of SIMI, said: “While new car registrations in April saw a 10.3% increase on the same month last year and are up 4.7% year to date, overall registrations still remain 20.9% behind that of pre-Covid (2019) levels. The return to more normal new car sales levels is being hampered in the short term by both supply chain issues and the uncertain global political climate. Over the medium term, both the high levels of vehicle taxation and the uncertainty over the continuation of electric vehicle supports has the potential to lead to the ongoing suppression of new vehicle demand. This will only make the ability to optimise the reduction in transport emissions more difficult.

“The increase in electric vehicle sales continues to be the one positive feature of the new car market, but this has only been possible due to the SEAI grant supports for both cars and home charging. The continuation of these supports is simply vital if we want to get close to the EV targets outlined in the country’s Climate Action Plan.”

The top five selling car brands year to date are: Toyota, Hyundai, Kia, Volkswagen and Skoda.

The top five car models year to date are: Hyundai Tucson, Toyota Corolla, Toyota C-HR, Toyota RAV4 and Toyota Yaris.

The top five electric vehicle car models year to date are: Hyundai Ionic 5, Volkswagen ID.4, Kia EV6, Nissan Leaf and Tesla Model 3.