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This is a list of U.S. states by vehicles per capita. Vehicle data are from the Bureau of Transportation Statistics [ 1 ] and population data are from the US Census. [ 2 ]
Additional taxes are also added to the car purchase price depending on the market value of the car when it was imported. [26] This has resulted in Singapore being the most expensive place in the world to own a car, [27] [28] and has resulted in car ownership rates dropping to about 33% in 2023, a decrease from 40% in 2013. [29]
Microstates such as San Marino, Andorra and Liechtenstein have high rates of car ownership. Countries and territories listed by the number of road motor vehicles per 1,000 inhabitants are as follows. Population figures are from the United Nations Statistics Division unless otherwise specified. [1]
Here are the three biggest costs of car ownership, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data: Vehicle purchases (net outlay): $5,539 (46% of overall cost) Gas, other fuels, and motor oil ...
California, Texas and Florida remain the three states with the highest overall number of cars stolen in 2023 due to high population numbers, but none of these saw a major increase in theft rates ...
Americans cars have transported 3,235,752 million Passenger-Miles in the US, in 2006, according to the DoT [25] (against 4,678 billion passenger kilometers [26] in the EU-27). In the US, car occupancy, is near of 1.7 people per car [27] (against around 1.5 occupant(s) by car in EU [28]).
The average American paid $251 per month for car insurance in 2023. But if you live in one of the most expensive states for car insurance, you could pay anywhere from $104 to $522 per month ...
A public electric car charging station in Kakaʻako, Honolulu As of June 2023 [update] , there were about 26,000 electric vehicles registered in Hawaii . [ 1 ] The state has the second-highest number of electric vehicles per capita in the United States, behind California .