200 XF Wagons were sold in the US last year
#1
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Way more McLarens were sold here, about 1500, than the XF SportBrake. Too bad, I think it's a great product that no one knows about.
2019 Wagon Sales in the US
Last year, Subaru sold over 180,000 Outback wagons in the United States, Volkswagen more than 6200 Golf Alltrack, Buick over 5000 of its Regal TourX, Volvo over 2800 of its V60 and V90 Cross Country models, and Audi some 1300 A4 Allroads.Meanwhile, Jaguar moved about 200 XF Sportbrake wagons, Volvo fewer than 1400 "standard" V60 and V90 wagons, and Mini 3565 copies of its Clubman.
VW did better but still reached sales of fewer than 5000 Golf SportWagens.
A BMW spokesman revealed to Car and Driver that less than 1 percent (or fewer than 500 units) of the 3-series models it sold here last year were Sports Wagon or slant-backed Gran Turismo versions. Mercedes-Benz and Porsche declined to break down their sales by body style, but, based on the industry average, we'd (charitably) estimate that sales of the E-class wagon and Panamera Sport Turismo amounted to little more than 8000 and 1300 units, respectively.
Add up those numbers, and the resulting picture is crystal clear. Of the approximately 216,000 wagons sold in America last year, ruggedized wagons accounted for more than 196,500, or nearly 91 percent of the total. The Outback, which remains Subaru's most popular model in the U.S., accounted for nearly 84 percent of the wagon market all by itself.
2019 Wagon Sales in the US
Last year, Subaru sold over 180,000 Outback wagons in the United States, Volkswagen more than 6200 Golf Alltrack, Buick over 5000 of its Regal TourX, Volvo over 2800 of its V60 and V90 Cross Country models, and Audi some 1300 A4 Allroads.Meanwhile, Jaguar moved about 200 XF Sportbrake wagons, Volvo fewer than 1400 "standard" V60 and V90 wagons, and Mini 3565 copies of its Clubman.
VW did better but still reached sales of fewer than 5000 Golf SportWagens.
A BMW spokesman revealed to Car and Driver that less than 1 percent (or fewer than 500 units) of the 3-series models it sold here last year were Sports Wagon or slant-backed Gran Turismo versions. Mercedes-Benz and Porsche declined to break down their sales by body style, but, based on the industry average, we'd (charitably) estimate that sales of the E-class wagon and Panamera Sport Turismo amounted to little more than 8000 and 1300 units, respectively.
Add up those numbers, and the resulting picture is crystal clear. Of the approximately 216,000 wagons sold in America last year, ruggedized wagons accounted for more than 196,500, or nearly 91 percent of the total. The Outback, which remains Subaru's most popular model in the U.S., accounted for nearly 84 percent of the wagon market all by itself.
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JaguarJack12 (02-26-2020)
#3
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Funny, you own or did own 3 cars I love, the SportBrake, Avant and the Clubman S. I actually just got a 2017 Clubman S All4 last week because I really missed driving a Manual, the wife would've preferred an Automatic but I convinced her a 6-speed will be way more fun. And cool that it is considered a wagon too.
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