Some cars sell quicker than others. Ask any Toyota dealer in the country about its supply of RAV4s, and they’ll probably tell you about the next shipment they’re expecting from the factory, rather than what’s on the lot, simply because they’re so in demand. On the flip side, you can likely walk into any Volkswagen dealership in the country right now and walk out with a good deal on an ID.4 that same day, as there’s over a year’s supply of the car sitting on lots, according to CarEdge.
Back in 2024, the Dodge Hornet suffered a similar fate, being named as the slowest-selling vehicle in all of America. At one point, dealers had a 428-day supply of the compact crossover that year. That meant that if Dodge stopped building Hornets that day, it would take 428 days to sell the existing supply already available (versus an industry-wide average of about 90 days). Makes sense, considering the car’s less-than-stellar reviews and relatively high price.
The Hornet is no longer the slowest-selling car in America, in part because Dodge stopped building it earlier this year. But even with the Hornet out of Dodge’s lineup, there are still plenty of unsold models sitting on dealer lots. One Hornet in particular can’t seem to shake that curse, as it’s been sitting unsold for 979 days, or over two and a half years.
This Poor Car, Man
A friend sent me the listing for this particular Hornet, and honestly, I can see why the dealership has had trouble moving it. While the normal 2024 Dodge Hornet had a starting price of $32,995 including destination, this one is a pricier R/T plug-in hybrid model, specifically, an R/T Plus. It was the most expensive Hornet trim offered in 2024, priced from $48,985 before any options.

Making things worse, this particular car did have options, including $495 for the Blu Bayou exterior paint job and $1,595 for an “R/T Blacktop Package,” which includes stuff like black painted mirror caps, black badging, black window moldings, and black aluminum wheels. According to the monroney, the total price out the door, as recommended by the factory, is $49,620. At 33 grand, a Hornet is sort of reasonable. But at nearly 50? Yeah, no way.

Obviously, no one was brave enough to purchase or lease this pricey Hornet at MSRP back in June 2023, when it first hit the lot. As time went on, the dealer, AutoNation Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram of Carlsbad, California, began offering discounts online to get it sold. During that time, it was being used as a service loaner (a thing that usually happens when a car can’t get sold). Cars.com has had the car listed since it arrived, and has a full history of the price changes from then until now:

That hasn’t worked, either. The cheapest this Hornet has gotten is $39,870, or $9,750 off of MSRP. In January, the car jumped back up to its starting MSRP, before being discounted again, this time by $9,732, to $39,888, where it sits today, still unsold.
A representative told me they moved the car to their used car inventory because it now has over 13,000 miles on the clock.
(Ed. Note: A previous version of this story insinuated this Hornet had been sitting undriven for the past three or so years, but since this story was published, the dealership confirmed to me it had been used as a service loaner. The text has been updated to reflect that. – Brian)
The Hornet Isn’t The Only One
Amazingly, this Hornet is far from the oldest “new” car to be currently languishing on a dealer lot unsold. That honor, according to CarEdge, goes to this 2023 Buick Enclave Avenir that’s been sitting on the market in Ohio for a scarcely believable 1,290 days, or over three and a half years. Because it’s a 2023 model year car, that means it was probably built back in 2022, the same year this website was launched. The car has been listed for MSRP—just over $63,000—since it arrived, with no discounts recorded, which might have something to do with it.

Perhaps less surprising to see topping this list of cursed dealership inventory is this 2023 Land Rover Defender TReK edition, limited to just 100 units and equipped with a bunch of off-road-minded add-ons, like a rooftop tent, Warn winch, snorkel air intake, ARB refrigerator in the trunk, solar panel, and extra underbody protection. While it certainly looks cool, it makes sense why most people wouldn’t want to spend $88,435 on a kitted-out Defender when they don’t plan to do much hardcore off-roading (a normal Defender 110 S, without all the extra gear, started at over 30 grand less).
Another unsurprising car to see here: A 2023 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray, specifically a 3LT model with an MSRP of $96,774. While I’m sure truly base Stingrays flew off the lot, this one, with its high trim level ballooning the price, has struggled to catch a buyer. For some context, a Z06 from that same model year was only $13,000 more expensive. I’d rather spend a bit more to have a base Z06 than be stuck with the most optioned-out Stingray any day of the week.

If you’re shopping for a deal, you might want to look at a Jaguar. While the company hasn’t built any cars in over a year, there are still plenty of them sitting unsold across the country, including two dozen F-Paces and a couple of i-Paces that have been sitting for over 1,000 days. Though the F-Type went out of production in the middle of 2024, there are still 117 of them sitting undriven at dealers, waiting for buyers.
In a few years, I suspect Hornets like the one above will be the subject of various “zombie car” articles, covering instances where dealerships manage to hold onto a car for years after said car ends production, before eventually selling it. This happens from time to time, especially with cars that are widely considered to be overpriced from the get-go. I’m just curious to see how much farther below MSRP this dealer is willing to go.
Top graphic image: AutoNation Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram









If the car had decent miles from a caring owner, it would be worth around $21,500.
Unfortunately, it’s a beat to shit loaner, and it will definitely have some wear and tear and likely funny odors.
They put over 13,000 miles on it as a loaner (meaning treated even worse than rentals) and they want only 10 grand off? Piss off.
There are $20k off plug-in Hornets near me with no miles. They obviously don’t want to sell this car.
“In the arms of an angel….”
I’m honestly surprised the Hornet has sold so badly. I’m sure it’s a lousy car, but I’d imagine that the biggest downside (reliability) wouldn’t show up on a test drive, and that many buyers wouldn’t be astute enough to realize that issue. It does have style, in my opinion, and I would have thought there would be more style-over-substance buyers out there!
I think it’s more sticker shock than anticipated issues that caused the Hornet to not sell. They were simply not price competitive with competing vehicles in the same category. You could get several better cars with more features for less money.
$49k in 2024 was out the door full-fat EV money. I’m not surprised this failed to sell at MSRP.
I’ve also thought it a rather handsome looking car. Too bad it’s such garbage.
What the hell is a Buick Avenir and how can it cost $63K?
lol Jaguar is toast.
Asking MSRP on a discontinued 3 year old crossover is wild.
I wanted a van with the four speed overdrive manual, and Ford was incredibly over the top on price. 1979.
I found one on a dealer lot, very stripped down and had been there a long time. May have been a Ford.
It already took a long time to produce since they shipped them to install the transmission.
They wouldn’t negotiate on the one in town, tried to scam me on a check to get a test drive, so they were done.
I special ordered one heavy on mechanical upgrades, and a stripped interior, 318 and four speed, with a heavy factory anti sway bar, and heavier front springs. I went through every option book I could find. Sway bar companies swear that option never existed. My excellent frame shop said it was the best handling truck they had ever driven. And they hated dodges.
Took forever to arrive and came with exceptionally good metallic paint.
Seems unusual orders get special treatment, they don’t want them back!
Dealer wanted to buy it from me at a profit for me, as the four speeds had spiked in demand, and they still took forever to order.
I probably should have.
318 with four speed overdrive, tall rear end, would cruise at 80, topped out around 85, aero drag. Got as much as 26 mpg in the hills running 60-70 mph. Three quarter ton.
Dealer told me I got an incredibly good price ordering it, but that dealer had started with very high quotes, so I told him it was the only reason they got the sale.
I never bought another new car.
You may think this Hornet is cursed, but just wait till you see the person who someday buys it.
Yeah, talk about getting…stung.
(I’ll see myself out…)
The Hornet has the double plus of being unreliably complex PLUS likely very difficult to find parts support down the road as it ages.
Add in insane pricing for what you get, and it’s the trifecta of undesirability.
I refuse to believe the Hornet has been on the market for 979 days. Feels like it just came out.
Jaguar is so brilliant, can’t you see this was their plan from the beginning?
It’s fine to just kind of hit “pause” on being a car company, as long as you have enough unsold inventory to last the next 3 years!
One appeared in my neighbor’s recently. It’s wrapped in flat purple with bright green wheels, Addams’s Family vibes or something. Photos coming soon to Car Spotting channel on Autopian discord!
Joker vibes
Discord is still not working for me.
No response from discord or autopian
That POS make the fucking Journey look like a Toyota LOL
I actually saw a brand new 2020 Journey for sale in 2023, so staying in stock 3 years after they stopped making them is totally on point.
Excuse me? Unpopular, over priced, 13,000 miles, used as a loaner, less popular model and the dealer is asking close to sticker?
There just has to be some kind of benefit to them for keeping it listed but not sold. I thought dealers paid interest for cars to sit on the lot, so you’d think it would be worse, but maybe there’s some wacky Fargo-esque shenanigans going on.
“Yeah, but that TruCoat!”
“If you’re shopping for a deal, you might want to look at a Jaguar. While the company hasn’t built any cars in over a year, there are still plenty of them sitting unsold across the country, including two dozen F-Paces and a couple of i-Paces that have been sitting for over 1,000 days.”
Holy mother of god. How do they still exist?
Since they already have a Temu Tilda Swinton Jag should just flog their cars on Temu. But then even Temu has standards.
You can buy a drive it yourself I-pace? I had no idea, I thought they only sold them to Waymo.
I saw one in the wild, once. I was confused by the strange looking E-Pace (a car which is already pretty rare) and sure enough!
Was it in a color other than white?
That would be really confusing.
Always amuses me how they raise the price just to lower it again. How dumb do they think people are?
Don’t answer that.
Thats usually due to an OEM incentive expiring and the new one not being in place yet.
Considering that the actual value for the Hornet will be about $25K at the high-end once it is driven off the lot, I’d say there is little limit to how dumb the dealer thinks their customers are.
Needs a big rock
https://youtu.be/Up6g0SDMJ7A
Appropriate. That time a science experiment went horribly wrong and an Alfa got crossed with a Dodge.
The CDJR dealer near me has 4 new 2023 Jeeps for sale.
https://www.fremontcdjr.com/remaining-new-2023-inventory/
That because even here in hybrid loving Bay Area, people know not to by a Jeep hybrid. I’m a bit surprised though. It seems like everyone in the Bay who isn’t driving a Tesla thinks they have to cross the Rubicon to get their kids to school.
Rubicon vs 880. One is far more likely to eat your vehicle and/or kill you!
^^^ This guy knows.
Very true, lol
The main dealer group site lists it as having 14k miles, so it likely spent some time as a service loaner. Edmunds has it as a used car with 14k miles too. The URL on the car on the actual dealer’s site has “wholesale” in it.
The Enclave is probably also in a limbo of dealer listing systems. That dealer group is based out of Ohio but the Buick dealer that it’s actually “located” at on the group site is in SD; it doesn’t show on the actual dealer’s site. The group site also shows nearly 60 more 2022-23 model year vehicles.
Hah, right before looking at the comments section I actually got an update from the dealer telling me the car had 13k miles on it, but hadn’t updated that data on some sales sites. The story has been updated to reflect that!
One wonders if any of those would ever beat the Lancia Stratos. Some 492 were produced from 1973 to 1975 but they sold so slowly that some were still available as new as late as 1980 (some 1825 days.)
Some of those Jaguars, at 1250-plus days, might be on track to take the crown, lol.
Depending on how long it takes Jaguar to introduce any new cars, they might just have a chance
same thing in the 90s, you could get a brand new 92 XJ220 in 97
The Lexus LFA is the all time champ at this. It came out in 2011, as a 2012 Model Year car. Automotive News‘ sales charts recorded 3 new sales of the LFA in 2020.
I’m not sure this will work…but this is ripe for the Principal skinner meme:
https://i.imgflip.com/all8cx.jpg
Even worse, I think Dodge sold a few new Darts last year, and they haven’t made those since, what, 2017?
$10k off a Hornet is not exactly a huge discount. Everyone knows they are duds, the opening volley should be $15k on the hood.
Assuming zero miles on the clock, $15K below an equivalent RAV4 is a decent starting point.
What’s really interesting about this Hornet and those Jags is that they arrived on the lot at the peak of the post-Covid car shortage and they still didn’t sell back then.
So like finding a fully-stocked RC Cola machine in the middle of the desert?
Not that anyone asked, but I love RC Cola. To me it’s the perfect middle ground between the flavors of Coke and Pepsi.
RC Zero is the Grail of sodas, and about as easy to find.