Home » America Finally Has Enough Crossovers, Thank You Very Much

America Finally Has Enough Crossovers, Thank You Very Much

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I attended the Houston Auto Show in 1996 as a car-pilled 12-year-old, and I distinctly remember a concept for a “crossover” vehicle from some random supplier. It wasn’t quite a car, but not a body-on-frame SUV. I talked to the reps for the company, and they said it was the future. We’d all be driving crossovers! They were not wrong, and the Toyota RAV4s that were slowly filling the streets around that time were a testament to their prognostications.

It’s now 30 years later, and there are plenty of crossovers. Too many crossovers? The latest Bank of America “Car Wars” report says we’ve probably reached crossover saturation, finally. The percentage of new car models that are crossovers might even go down in 2029 by a decent margin.

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As a regular reader of The Morning Dump, you’re probably aware that one of the reasons we’ll see a drop in crossovers as a total percentage of the market is that automakers are cancelling EV projects, and a lot of those were supposed to be CUVs. One company that’s pushed forward is General Motors, and they say it’s working out for them. It’s also working out for BYD, but in a way that’s destabilizing the local and global economies.

Tesla was the original EV disruptor, but now it’s been disrupted, and some big analysts are saying the stock is a little overweight.

The Crossover Saturation Point Has Been Reached

You will not be surprised to learn that Crossovers, which were merely one option for many years, have suddenly become the default option. According to Bank of America’s “Car Wars” report, from 2016 to 2025, crossovers made up 50% of new model launches by volume, compared to just 25% for light trucks (SUVs and trucks), 11% for small cars, 5% for luxury/sports cars, and just 9% for mid-sized/large cars.

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Bofa Suv Cuv Mix Graph

The Crossover is a result of both taste and the inevitable carcinization of the car market. People want big things that have a lot of space, thus the success of wagons, followed by minivans, followed by SUVs. What people thought they needed didn’t change, but preference and fashion did dictate the form in which that functionality would be delivered.

A crossover, though, is sort of a mix of SUV, minivan, and wagon, depending on what your particular flavor is. A Cadillac XT6 is a minivan without sliding doors, just like a Subaru Outback is a wagon that shops at REI, or a Bronco Sport is an SUV that doesn’t go to the gym.

Looking at the chart above, you’ll see the non-volume weighted percentage of new car reveals (either brand new models or significant refreshes). You’ll see small cars vanish as they’re replaced by crossovers both large and small. That changes a bit in the last couple of years as EV crossovers and new electric sedans started to come on the market, as well as a new Camry and some other reveals. In 2029, there’s another relative decline in crossovers, reflecting both a cancellation of EV projects and the full-size truck lifecycle.

As BofA puts it:

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Since the MY1997 launch of the Toyota RAV4 and the Honda CR-V, crossover utility vehicles (or CUVs) have been the fastest growing vehicle segment in the US. However, that trend is finally slowing and may be plateauing. Specifically, 79 of the 159 new models we forecast for MY2026-29, or 47% of estimated new volume, will be CUVs. Although, there is still a focus, the relative mix of new CUVs drops meaningfully through MY2029. The CUV segment now appears saturated by almost all automakers increasing competition and putting the segments’ profitability at risk.

This is somewhat analogous to the proliferation of light truck nameplates in the early 2000s (Exhibit 11), but the CUV proliferation has been more than 2x and broadbased. It is unlikely that the CUVs will drop like trucks did, but it will be interesting to watch.

Basically, most car companies can’t necessarily make more money by releasing a bunch more crossovers. Where would a new crossover even fit within Toyota’s lineup?

GM Releases Non-Quarterly EV Sales To Brag About EV Sales

Chevy Equinox Ev 1lt 9
Photo: The Autopian

General Motors decided in 2018 that it didn’t want to do monthly sales releases, shifting instead to a quarterly number. As a data person and a journalist this kinda sucked, but I suppose this is a not my pig, not my farm situation. GM can do whatever it wants.

As proof, GM decided to release some EV sales numbers to brag about becoming the 2nd biggest EV company in the United States (After Tesla, supplanting Ford).

In the 2025 first quarter, Chevrolet became the fastest growing domestic EV brand, surpassing Ford. For the year through May, Chevrolet has sold more than 37,000 EVs in the U.S., compared to 34,000 for Ford. GM will report second quarter sales on July 1.

GM’s portfolio includes highly capable full-size trucks with impressive, available range like the Chevrolet Silverado EV, GMC Sierra EV, and GMC HUMMER EV; groundbreaking luxury SUVs from Cadillac like the Escalade IQ; and the budget-friendly Chevrolet Equinox EV.

May was GM’s second-best month in history for EV sales, which follows 94% year-over-year growth in the first quarter. In the first two months of the second quarter, GM’s share of the U.S. EV market was about 15.5%, more than double our position a year ago and approaching the company’s national market share of 17%.

General Motors makes good electric cars. It makes a lot of them. It even makes a relatively affordable EV in the form of the $35,000 Equinox EV, which I drove and was impressed with! Some of this is fun with numbers, because if I could do two pullups last year, and now I can do four pullups, I’ve increased the number of pullups I can do by 100% (note: I’m not sure I could do that many pullups).

Still, it’s an accomplishment, and GM is proving that it can still find new customers for electric cars in spite of headwinds.

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Everyone Is Mad At BYD

Investors Say Buffett Might Go All In On Chinas Byd
Photo: Depositphotos.com

Yikes. Just… yikes. BYD is probably going to be the biggest electric automaker in the world this year, thanks both to building affordable cars of reasonable quality and to a brutal, never-ending price war. The company is bringing a specific type of energy to its endeavors that would make Patti LuPone blush.

Like LuPone, the rest of the industry is mad at BYD, and the country’s leaders are starting to recognize that a victory for BYD over Tesla might be a pyrrhic one. Why? While China is not a profit-focused country in the EV space at the moment, carmakers are trying to lower costs by squeezing suppliers until they pop like a homemade stress ball.

Per Bloomberg:

Some auto manufacturers have been asking steelmakers to reduce the price of steel plates used in vehicles by more than 10% since last year, the China Iron and Steel Association said in a statement published in China Metallurgical News on Tuesday. Some carmakers have also delayed payments to mills by months, it said.

The country’s EV industry is in the throes of a vicious price war, sending share prices tumbling and prompting government intervention to try and prop up the market. It’s a fresh headwind for Chinese steel mills who have been grappling with a yearslong property market crisis and, more recently, slowing economic growth caused by US-led trade wars.

And that’s not all, from Nikkei Asia, BYD’s also putting pressure on global rubber futures:

International prices for natural rubber are plummeting as price cuts by major Chinese electric vehicle maker BYD triggered concern that a possible price war in the country’s auto sector will weigh on tire prices.

Speculation that price reductions for EVs and plug-in hybrids will lead to downward pressure on tire prices has resulted in a drop in the natural rubber market. Tires account for 70% of natural rubber demand.

Benchmark rubber futures on the Osaka Exchange fell 4% on June 3 to 280 yen ($2) per kilogram, the lowest price since February 2024. Though futures prices had tumbled after U.S. President Donald Trump announced his sweeping tariffs in early April, they rebounded later as tariff tensions between Washington and Beijing eased.

Dang, I was going to pay for my kid’s college with the collection of WHAM-O Super Balls I’ve been keeping under my bed.

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Tesla Gets Downgraded Again

Tesla Cybertruck 2025 Hd Fe7914d61b855405d9e855dabe1f907a1e3069f02
Photo credit: Tesla

Tesla CEO Elon Musk, fresh from reportedly getting in a fight with the Secretary of the Treasury, is now having to wrestle with a couple of downgrades from analysts, as Bloomberg reports:

Both Argus Research and Baird cut the stock to the equivalent of hold ratings, cementing Tesla’s reputation as the least-loved megacap stock among analysts. Shares fell 1.6% in premarket trading.

The downgrades mark the latest hurdle for Tesla, shares of which are down about 27% in 2025, making it the weakest performer of the so-called Magnificent Seven stocks. Tesla shares had rallied in the wake of Trump’s reelection, which Musk vigorously supported, but are down almost 40% off their peak in December.

Much of the stock’s recent decline came after the high-profile blowup between Musk and Trump last week. While Musk subsequently suggested he was open to making amends, the tensions are seen as a significant headwind overhanging the shares.

Musk deleted a lot of his mean tweets and the stock price went back up, so maybe it’s just that easy.

What I’m Listening To While Writing TMD

I adore Talking Heads. An all-time band. Sometimes my favorite band. I went to see Stop Making Sense in a theater in 2024 because I care. For reasons mostly of timing, the band never released an official video for “Psycho Killer.” The Internet is weird, and an older band’s most popular songs now might not be what was most popular back then. Why is Pavement’s “Spit on a Stranger” so popular? Who knows? Partially due to Guitar Hero, maybe, “Psycho Killer” has had almost double the number of Spotify streams as the band’s second-most-streamed song. Anyway, it was worth the wait to get Saoirse Ronan in a Talking Heads video.

The Big Question

What’s your favorite crossover?

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Top Photo Credit: Toyota

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Dan Bee
Dan Bee
8 hours ago

My favorite crossover? AMC Eagle.

MST3Karr
MST3Karr
1 day ago

Favorite crossover? I dunno, but I love my Corolla Cross Hybrid. I don’t really get all the crossover hate. A hunnert or so years ago, cars had a two-box design, then everybody had a trunk for like, a century, and now we’ve gone back. Big whup.

I will, however, agree with anybody who says certain cars or brands *should not* be CUV-ized. Looking at you, European prestige sports car marques.

Jason H.
Jason H.
1 day ago

If I was going to buy a new vehicle today it would be a Equinox EV AWD

However, in reality my next vehicle that I’ll actually buy is a vehicle to flat tow behind my ambulance turned RV. It must be a Chevy and I’m leaning towards a late model Chevy Tracker.

I would really like to flat tow my Chevy Bolt but the manual and everything I’ve read online says that is a no-go. (Would be great to have an extra 66 kWh battery backup to supplement the 10 kWh in the Ambo)

Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
1 day ago

I’m split between Citroën Méhari and a lifted Miata if I had to buy one.

Used to have a hand me down Subaru Impreza outback, and after 200,000 miles, hitting two deer, a Land Rover, and a UPS truck, and never getting stuck in any snow I could open the doors in, o gave it away to a friend that put another 50,000 on it, and it’s still going great except for some rust where the UPS truck hit it. So I liked that. My wife’s crosstech is an abomination

Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
1 day ago

Favorite crossover? Does the Mazda Navajo count? If not, then the Holden Adventura TVC , the world needs more LS powered Outbacks.

Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
1 day ago

That chart with the jagged lines? I guess it has luxury and sport lumped together because otherwise they would be two small to see , but I always thought of sports cars as the exact opposite of luxury cars.
Don’t even get me started about sport and utility.

InvivnI
InvivnI
1 day ago

I’d always been against crossovers until I had a kid and realised – as a tall person – how much easier it is on my back is to angle a little person into a baby seat when it’s around hip-height rather than knee-height. I think this really is the number one use case for them. Of course, all these families need to discover MPVs/minivans/people movers and their sliding doors. And someone really needs to make a mid-size car with a sliding door that looks good. Kia’s already done it with the Carnival in the large segment but that thing is unnecessarily large unless you’re carting around a full family of 6 or 7 on the regular.

As for my favourite crossover? I’m going to be patriotic here and say it has to be the Ford Territory – the Australian one, not the smaller one currently selling in South America and SE Asia. Based on the RWD Falcon fulll-size sedan platform, journalists praised it as the best-handling full-size SUV this side of a BMW X5, high praise given its much lower point of entry. We have a final edition 2014 SZ Series II and it’s a lovely car to drive; smooth, quiet and well tuned to Australia’s less than perfect roads. You do have to get passed the rather dated – even for the time – grey and matte silver interior though, which includes an infotainment system that’s simultaneously festooned with too many buttons AND overly reliant on its touchscreen to provide visual feedback.

Last edited 1 day ago by InvivnI
Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
1 day ago
Reply to  InvivnI

The Honda Odyssey would fill that spot nicely. If only the weird kink in the greenhouse didn’t make it look like a hearse.

Harvey's PJs (Not His Real Name)
Harvey's PJs (Not His Real Name)
1 day ago

I’ll never get the hate against crossovers. They’re basically just tall wagons. Maybe the commentariat here is in denial about their aging bodies and clinging to the days when they could still comfortably slither into a low-slung sedan or roadster.

I love my sedan and roadster, but getting into the crossover is a lot less painful after a back injury.

The kicker to me is that truck get a lot of love, when they’re just generally crossovers or SUVs except less practical most of the time unless you’re using them for work.

Last edited 1 day ago by Harvey's PJs (Not His Real Name)
Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
1 day ago

Crossovers that you have to climb into are not old person friendly at all.

Seat height above 18 inches really sucks when I tried to get my 95 year old mom into my sister’s crossover. I had to get step stool for her. Ridiculous to have to climb up into a car.

I’m 70, and sitting in a car with a seat height of only 8 inches is fine for getting in and out out of the car for me, and I have a long list of back injuries from my exciting youth.

Cranberry
Cranberry
2 days ago

Other than the engine, theft issue, AWD with a limited lifespan by design and penchant to leak washer fluid, I liked my third-gen Sorento a lot.

It was slightly above compact CUV size and made for solid packaging, an emergency third row, carried all I wanted it to.

It punched above its weight off-pavement, solid transmission, was comfortable and the interior was well designed. Even towed a couple thousand pounds across the country for me and didn’t suck.

The only direct competitor at the time was the 2nd gen Acadia and what I’d probably get if I wanted to return to that segment since it seems the only common issue is needing a small fix for the shifter.

But today, I have a soft spot for the early RAV4’s. My dad still has a 2001.

Mr E
Mr E
2 days ago

Generally speaking, asking me what my favorite crossover is is slightly akin to asking me about my favorite type of dog shit.

Anything that I like that isn’t a sedan, hatchback or coupe is an SUV (original Pathfinder, current Bronco, etc.), although I probably still won’t ever buy one.

Ranwhenparked
Ranwhenparked
2 days ago

Matra Rancho

Torque
Torque
1 day ago
Reply to  Ranwhenparked

Excellent Choice!

Box Rocket
Box Rocket
2 days ago

Well, I’ve owned two Volvo XC90s, a large number of friends and family members (including my wife) have Mazda CX-5s.

I really like how the Mazda CX-50 looks, and its larger siblings also look quite nice in a different way.

Volvo’s range looks good and offers solid value.

Lincoln’s offerings are solid and the benchmark for “American luxury” in the mainstream (especially non-EV).

Jaguar and Range Rover also make some very impressive and appealing (under warranty at least) models.

The Alfa Romeo Stelvio might be widely overlooked by folks who probably would buy a Macan instead, but it has a lot going for it.

So… Yeah there’s lots to choose from depending what appeals. I couldn’t pick just one favorite, though.

Myk El
Myk El
2 days ago

What’s your favorite crossover?

Transformers meets My Little Pony

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/My_Little_Pony/Transformers

Rad Barchetta
Rad Barchetta
2 days ago
Reply to  Myk El

TIL

Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
1 day ago
Reply to  Myk El

“Friendship in Disguise” I chuckled

BobWellington
BobWellington
2 days ago

America had too many crossovers 20 years ago.

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