The 25 Best-Selling Models in the U.S. in 2025 (So Far) For the most part, we find the same names as last year, with some shuffling of the order.

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Photo: D.Boshouwers
Chevrolet Equinox

10. Chevrolet Equinox: 129,889 units

As we get into the top 10, we can see how ferocious the fight at the top of the sales food chain. Despite a 22 percent gain this year, the Equinox dropped from seventh to tenth place. As well as Chevy’s compact SUV as done, others have simply done even better.

Photo: D.Rufiange
Toyota Tacoma

9. Toyota Tacoma: 130,873 units

Five of the top nine spots are occupied by pickup trucks, which remains impressive. The Toyota Tacoma is the first of the mid-size model category.

Photo: Tesla
Tesla Model Y

8. Tesla Model Y: 146,000 units (estimated)

The Tesla Model Y remains the best-selling electric vehicle, but its sales for the first half of the year fell from 195,000 units in 2024 to 146,000 units this year. Your explanations are as good as ours.

Photo: D.Rufiange
Toyota Camry

7. Toyota Camry: 155,330 units

What consistency! For the first six months of the year 2024, Toyota sold 155,242 Camrys; that’s up by whopping 88 units this year.

Photo: GMC
GMC Sierra

6. GMC Sierra: 166,409 units

The GMC Sierra continues to gain ground in its category, with a 14 percent jump this year. The results do not include the electric variant, of which 2,773 units sold.

Photo: Ram
Ram 1500

5. Ram 1500: 174,320 units

A small 3-percent decline for Ram this year, but with the return of the Hemi V8 in the 1500 series, we should see a rebound in the second half of the year.

Photo: Honda
Honda CR-V

4. Honda CR-V: 212,561 units

The Honda CR-V continues to be a pillar for Honda, with a growth of 8 percent in the first six months of the year.

Photo: Toyota
Toyota RAV4

3. Toyota RAV4: 239,451 units

Honda rival Toyota has its own pillar. In its last year in its current form, the RAV4 continues to impress, despite a 4 percent decline. With the new version arriving soon, it will continue to chase the full-size pickup trucks.

Photo: Chevrolet
Chevrolet Silverado

2. Chevrolet Silverado: 283,812 units

The Silverado is down 6 percent since the beginning of the year, but that's not enough to boot it off its second position. When combining the sales of General Motors' two pickup trucks (the other being the GMC Sierra), the American giant sells more pickup trucks than Ford with its F-Series.

Photo: D.Rufiange
Ford F-150

1. Ford F-150: 399,819 units

Despite everything, the F-150's results continue to boggle. The model is on track for an 800,000-unit year. Results are up 17 percent this year.