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Italy May 2025: Jeep Avenger repeats at #2, Peugeot 208 up to record #3

First Italian podium finish for the Peugeot 208.

Stable result for new car sales in Italy in May at -0.2% year-on-year to 139,390 units. The year-to-date is also almost immobile when compared with last year at -0.5% to 722,452. In terms of sales by channel, private sales are at -4% to 49.6% share vs. 51.3% last year (51.8% vs. 54% YTD), self registrations are down -6.9% to 11.8% share vs. 12.6% in May 2024 (8.6% vs. 10.6% YTD), long term leases gain +3.5% to 23.4% share vs. 22.4% a year ago (24% vs. 21.2% YTD), short term rentals soar 14.1% to 9.3% share vs. 8.1% (9.2% vs. 8.8% YTD) and company sales are up 4.7% to 6% share vs. 5.7% (5.6% vs. 5.5% YTD).

Looking at power sources, petrol is down -19.4% to 25.9% share vs. 31.9% a year ago (26.6% vs. 31% YTD), diesel is off -32% to 9.9% share vs. 14.5% (9.8% vs. 14.9% YTD), LPG soars 34.3% to 9% share vs. 6.6% (8.9% vs. 8.9% YTD) and HEVs gain 8.4% to 43.7% vs. 40.1% (44.6% vs. 38.9% YTD). Full hybrids are up 12.6% to 12.8% share vs. 11.3% a year ago (12.5% vs. 10.7% YTD) and mild hybrids are up 6.7% to 30.9% share vs. 28.8% last year (32.1% vs. 28.2% YTD). PHEVs shoot up 94% to 6.4% share vs. 3.3% (4.9% vs. 3.2% YTD) and BEVs surge 41.1% to 5.1% share vs. 3.6% in May 2024 (5.1% vs. 2.9% YTD).

The Jeep Avenger repeats at record 2nd place.

Fiat (-7.9%) continues to see its share fall month after month: it started the year at 11.9%, then 10.7% in February, 9.7% in March, 8.8% in April and 8.6% this month. Fiat is penalised by terrible mistake (soon to be corrected) of only offering the Fiat 500 as a BEV (124 sales this month), also we are still waiting for the new Grande Panda (only 55 BEVs sold in May) to crack the Top 50. Less than 100 sales below is Toyota (-0.8%), with Volkswagen (-6.4%) rounding out the podium. Peugeot (+31.5%) and Dacia (+67.8%) both lodge fantastic gains to close out the Top 5. Ford (+9.7%) and BMW (+6.5%) are the only additional gainers in the Top 10, with Jeep (-10.1%), Audi (-7.6%) and Renault (-5.6%) all losing significant ground. Below, Cupra (+47%), Alfa Romeo (+24%), Skoda (+16.2%) and MG (+16.1%) make themselves noticed, with BYD (+3640.4%) and Omoda+Jaecoo (+4840%) still gearing up.

The Fiat Panda (-6.9%) endures its lowest share so far this year at 5.9%, representing 68.7% of the carmaker’s May volume (76.7% YTD). The Jeep Avenger (+25.5%) repeats at a record 2nd place, a rank it now also holds YTD, with only 10.2% of Avenger sales going to the BEV variant. The Peugeot 208 (+62%) surges to #3, this is the nameplate’s very first incursion inside the Italian podium, its previous best being #4 in June 2022. It overtakes the Dacia Sandero (+15.1%) staying at #4 but down to #3 year-to-date. The Toyota Yaris Cross (+2.2%) and a soaring Dacia Duster (+150.2%) follow. #2 a year ago, the Citroen C3 loses -23% to #7. The Fiat 600 (+397.5%) is the manufacturer’s only ray of light, repeating at a record #11. Below, the BYD Seal U is up 8 spots on April to #23 and the Renault Symbioz up 10 to #34, both reaching new ranking records. The Lancia Ypsilon (BEV and hybrid only, here too a terrible mistake) slips out of the Top 50 (-83.3%).

Previous month: Italy April 2025: Jeep Avenger breaks all records

One year ago: Italy May 2024: Negative market, Fiat hits lowest ever share, Citroen C3 up to #2

Full May 2025 Top 51 All brands and Top 50 models below.

Italy May 2025 – brands:

PosBrandMay-25%/24Apr2025%/24PosFY24
1Fiat11,9328.6%– 7.9%171,4499.9%– 9.2%11
2Toyota11,0908.0%– 0.8%355,5697.7%+ 0.8%22
3Volkswagen10,7527.7%– 6.4%252,6147.3%– 3.2%33
4Peugeot8,6356.2%+ 31.5%443,0606.0%+ 16.8%56
5Dacia7,8345.6%+ 67.8%546,6786.5%+ 15.9%44
6Renault7,7725.6%– 5.6%735,5294.9%– 2.1%65
7Ford6,9005.0%+ 9.7%632,2534.5%– 2.3%88
8BMW6,8484.9%+ 6.5%833,0234.6%+ 5.2%77
9Audi6,2944.5%– 7.6%1130,9824.3%– 2.4%1010
10Jeep5,9144.2%– 10.1%932,1974.5%– 0.8%99
11Citroen5,2223.7%– 8.3%1029,5294.1%– 6.2%1111
12Mercedes4,7803.4%+ 0.8%1324,0703.3%+ 11.9%1312
13Hyundai4,3103.1%– 9.9%1421,0292.9%– 7.8%1413
14MG4,2993.1%+ 16.1%1225,1433.5%+ 45.5%1216
15Skoda3,7202.7%+ 16.2%1816,7432.3%+ 3.7%1817
16Opel3,5962.6%– 13.8%1518,9132.6%– 11.8%1615
17Kia3,4662.5%– 22.9%1619,3782.7%– 5.7%1514
18Suzuki2,7031.9%+ 5.0%1914,6842.0%– 12.8%1918
19Alfa Romeo2,4821.8%+ 24.0%1714,2492.0%+ 31.7%2021
20Cupra2,3331.7%+ 47.0%209,3971.3%+ 21.3%2124
21Nissan2,0701.5%– 32.6%2217,3782.4%– 6.0%1719
22DR Motor2,0231.5%+ 3.4%257,5421.0%– 4.4%2323
23BYD1,9451.4%+ 3640.4%217,6011.1%+ 2746.8%2237
24Mini1,3981.0%+ 26.6%236,4050.9%+ 6.0%2427
25Volvo1,1600.8%– 32.0%246,2010.9%– 30.1%2522
26Omoda+Jaecoo9880.7%+ 4840.0%283,9830.6%+ 31304.0%3038
27Mazda9560.7%– 17.3%304,7650.7%– 25.0%2726
28Tesla8550.6%– 20.3%354,7710.7%– 7.1%2625
29Honda8540.6%+ 64.9%293,9490.5%+ 19.8%3131
30Lancia6390.5%– 83.3%264,6490.6%– 77.4%2820
31Porsche6220.4%– 13.4%342,9280.4%– 29.6%3330
32Lexus6120.4%+ 47.5%322,9010.4%+ 40.7%3433
33Seat6030.4%– 57.0%274,3330.6%– 35.6%2928
34Land Rover5690.4%– 47.3%313,4840.5%– 24.2%3229
35DS5600.4%+ 16.7%332,4690.3%– 10.0%3634
36EVO4180.3%– 22.0%362,8320.4%+ 9.9%3532
37EMC2950.2%+ 178.3%381,1110.2%+ 99.1%3741
38Subaru2870.2%+ 82.8%391,0660.1%+ 65.8%3840
39Sportequipe1950.1%+ 680.0%378790.1%+ 36.9%3943
40Mahindra1740.1%+ 770.0%505900.1%+ 368.3%4250
41Maserati1400.1%– 38.6%407780.1%– 36.8%4039
42Mitsubishi1230.1%– 85.1%417340.1%– 65.7%4135
43Ferrari770.1%+ 28.3%423750.1%+ 7.1%4345
44Lamborghini530.0%– 5.4%452480.0%+ 10.7%4546
45Smart520.0%– 81.3%433520.0%– 75.9%4436
46Polestar320.0%+ 45.5%461560.0%+ 122.9%4849
47Lotus290.0%– 12.1%491220.0%– 20.3%4948
48Lynk & Co250.0%– 82.1%441760.0%– 64.8%4742
49SsangYong150.0%– 89.7%47880.0%– 71.8%5047
50Jaguar110.0%– 85.3%481810.0%– 67.2%4644
51Aston Martin70.0%+ 40.0%51550.0%+ 25.0%5151
  –Others7210.5%+ 407.7%  –2,8570.4%+ 297.9%  –  –

Italy May 2025 – models:

PosModelMay-25%/24Apr2025%/24PosFY24
1Fiat Panda8,1945.9%– 6.9%154,8267.6%+ 2.6%11
2Jeep Avenger4,7153.4%+ 25.5%224,3903.4%+ 44.0%23
3Peugeot 2083,7312.7%+ 62.0%519,0342.6%+ 33.2%57
4Dacia Sandero3,5652.6%+ 15.1%424,0763.3%– 8.0%32
5Toyota Yaris Cross3,4012.4%+ 2.2%615,9522.2%– 1.6%85
6Dacia Duster3,3382.4%+ 150.2%817,1582.4%+ 42.9%612
7Citroen C33,2332.3%– 23.0%323,3923.2%+ 8.0%44
8Renault Clio3,2072.3%+ 0.4%913,2131.8%– 7.8%106
9Ford Puma3,0552.2%+ 35.7%1212,7771.8%– 5.4%1113
10Toyota Yaris3,0102.2%+ 7.9%716,4852.3%+ 11.8%78
11Fiat 6002,8062.0%+ 397.5%1111,8181.6%+ 1310.3%15n/a
12MG ZS2,5941.9%– 9.0%1014,6822.0%+ 13.1%914
13Toyota Aygo X2,5071.8%+ 14.0%189,8661.4%+ 3.1%1919
14VW T-Roc2,4961.8%– 22.7%1511,8991.6%– 16.5%1411
15Peugeot 20082,3081.7%+ 28.1%1610,7211.5%– 7.2%1617
16Renault Captur2,2701.6%– 14.0%1911,9971.7%– 10.0%1310
17VW Tiguan2,2681.6%+ 23.9%1410,6911.5%+ 61.6%1721
18VW T-Cross2,0381.5%– 15.9%2110,3301.4%– 4.4%1816
19BMW X12,0001.4%+ 28.5%209,6611.3%+ 18.8%2020
20Peugeot 30081,8251.3%+ 26.4%257,8621.1%+ 46.6%2439
21Opel Corsa1,7441.3%– 32.5%1312,2001.7%+ 14.6%1215
22Audi A31,6531.2%+ 71.1%267,1921.0%+ 17.3%2737
23BYD Seal U1,6151.2%new315,6790.8%new34n/a
24Kia Sportage1,5111.1%– 34.7%238,8031.2%– 13.8%2218
25Hyundai i101,3501.0%– 30.9%286,2460.9%– 10.9%3026
26Hyundai Tucson1,2900.9%+ 27.3%326,0640.8%+ 23.4%3236
27Kia Picanto1,2550.9%+ 8.8%385,7220.8%+ 26.8%3334
28Toyota C-HR1,2410.9%– 16.7%298,1171.1%+ 22.7%2325
29VW Golf1,2210.9%+ 25.5%276,9921.0%+ 29.4%2831
30Alfa Romeo Junior1,2150.9%new227,3181.0%new26n/a
31Ford Focus1,1340.8%+ 0.8%246,1900.9%+ 3.0%3138
32Ford Tourneo Courier1,1320.8%+ 48.9%305,3350.7%+ 72.2%38n/a
33Mercedes GLA1,1200.8%+ 1.4%435,6130.8%– 6.0%3529
34Renault Symbioz1,1150.8%new444,0130.6%new49n/a
35BMW Serie 11,0950.8%+ 53.4%504,4720.6%+ 11.6%46n/a
36Nissan Qashqai1,0870.8%– 41.0%n/a8,9811.2%– 10.7%2122
37VW Taigo1,0670.8%+ 55.1%414,8850.7%– 9.7%4347
38Skoda Fabia1,0560.8%+ 0.0%395,0780.7%+ 22.1%4045
39Ford Kuga1,0390.7%– 24.2%355,4050.7%– 17.9%3733
40Cupra Formentor1,0330.7%+ 5.1%n/an/an/an/an/a44
41Skoda Kamiq1,0230.7%n/a424,9030.7%n/a4149
42Suzuki Swift9960.7%n/a454,6960.7%n/a4443
43DR 5.09500.7%– 11.3%n/a4,3620.6%n/a4748
44BMW X39450.7%+ 35.8%n/a3,4650.5%– 0.3%n/an/a
45Audi Q29050.6%+ 93.8%49n/an/an/an/an/a
46Alfa Romeo Tonale8970.6%– 39.4%335,1680.7%– 33.0%3928
47MG 38710.6%+ 677.7%177,3941.0%+ 5862.9%25n/a
48VW Polo8630.6%– 39.2%34n/an/an/an/a32
49Audi A58550.6%+ 942.7%n/a2,9650.4%+ 707.9%n/an/a
50Opel Mokka8540.6%+ 75.4%n/an/an/an/an/an/a
n/aAudi A18520.6%– 17.3%474,2960.6%+ 22.5%48n/a
n/aSuzuki Vitara8360.6%+ 16.4%404,9000.7%– 4.5%4241
n/aNissan Juke7690.6%– 19.9%n/a6,4820.9%+ 4.1%2935
n/aAudi Q37660.5%– 69.4%375,4890.8%– 29.7%3623
n/aLancia Ypsilon6390.5%– 83.3%364,6490.6%– 77.4%459
n/aTesla Model Y6350.5%+ 68.0%n/a2,1530.3%– 27.3%n/an/a
n/aJeep Compass6010.4%– 61.4%n/a3,9130.5%– 49.6%5027
n/aTesla Model 32140.2%– 68.6%n/a2,6030.4%+ 26.2%n/an/a
n/aFiat 5001240.1%– 92.4%n/a9050.1%– 91.3%n/a24

Source: UNRAE

This Post Has 3 Comments
  1. As to the Grande Panda … here we have another GIANT mistake:
    Serbia seems unable to assemble the GP and C3 in sufficient numbers.

    GP books are stuffed until Oct 2026, yet only 120 GP’s per day leave the factory.
    Due to high demand, Kragujevac was chosen as a 2-nd production site for the C3.
    Current daily production rate: 10 (ten)
    Main trouble: relocation of Italian workers to Serbia and lack of hybrid components.

    So, if you decide to produce in a country were wages for locals are just €600 p/m you’re in for trouble …

  2. Matt, is the Yp BEV-only?
    Hybrids are offered too.

    “The Lancia Ypsilon (only BEV, here too a terrible mistake) slips out of the Top 50 (-83.3%)”

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