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Overview of globally best-selling automobiles Image Automobile Production Units sold Notes 1927 Ford Model-T. Ford Model T: 1908–1927 16,500,000 [8] The first car to achieve one million, five million, ten million and fifteen million units sold. [8] In 1914, it was estimated that nine out of every ten cars in the world were Fords. [citation ...
Listed as the world's best selling highway-capable plug-in electric car of all-time until early January 2020. [364] Global sales of 550,000 units through October 2021. [365] Second generation Nissan Maxima. Nissan Maxima: 1981–2023 1,700,000 in the first five generations up to 2001. [366] Nissan Micra K11 1.3 SR. Nissan Micra: 1982–2023
The summary chart includes the five largest worldwide automotive manufacturing groups as of 2017 by number of vehicles produced. Those same groups held the top 5 positions 2007 to 2019; Hyundai Motor Group had a lower rank until it took the fifth spot in 2007 from the at that time split German-American auto manufacturer DaimlerChrysler, while Ford became surpassed by Honda in 2020, and even ...
The second-best-selling car was Toyota’s Corolla, with 256,400 vehicles sold globally. JATO’s data spanned 53 international markets, plus data and forecasts for 31 other markets and estimates ...
It's now aiming at the top position in the auto industry by selling 20 million electric cars in 2030, which is around twice the sales volume of Toyota, the biggest automaker in the world. Electric ...
Toyota is the world's top automaker by vehicles sold, selling 10.5 million vehicles in 2022, far ahead of the 8.3 million sold by the Volkswagen Group. Daihatsu and Hino Motors, another Toyota ...
Automotive superlatives include attributes such as the smallest, largest, fastest, lightest, best-selling, and so on. This list (except for the firsts section) is limited to automobiles built after World War II, and lists superlatives for earlier vehicles separately. The list is also limited to production road cars that:
Toyota, which surpassed G.M. as the world's largest automaker in 2006, became that year for the first time one of the Big Three of the U.S. when surpassing Chrysler. [5] After surpassing Ford as the world's second-largest automaker by 2005, Toyota surpassed Ford in 2007 as the second-largest U.S. automaker, a title Ford had held since 1931. [6]