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For more information on this release:
E-mail: transport@cso.ie Olive Loughnane (+353) 21 453 5281 Kieran Riordan (+353) 21 4535320 Noreen Leahy (+353) 21 4535262
For general information on CSO statistics:
information@cso.ie (+353) 21 453 5000 On-line ISSN 2009-5678

This release has been compiled during the COVID-19 crisis. The results contained in this release reflect some of the economic impacts of the COVID-19 situation. For further information see Press Statement Vehicles licensed for the first time July 2020.

CSO statistical release, , 11am

Vehicles licensed for the first time

July 2020

 July January - July
20192020Change 20192020Change
New private cars18,74115,329-3,412-18.2% 96,38064,513-31,867-33.1%
New goods vehicles2,7362,298-438-16.0% 17,04112,070-4,971-29.2%
Total new vehicles23,05419,453-3,601-15.6% 122,02383,797-38,226-31.3%
          
Used private cars9,2038,275-928-10.1% 60,89734,856-26,041-42.8%
Used goods vehicles1,3391,048-291-21.7% 8,9805,564-3,416-38.0%
Total used vehicles11,77510,454-1,321-11.2% 77,88745,567-32,320-41.5%

Decrease of 18.2% in new private cars licensed in July 2020

Figure 1 New private cars licensed for the first time
go to full release

In July 2020, 15,239 new private cars were licensed, a fall of 18.2% compared with July 2019. The number of used (imported) private cars licensed decreased by 10.1% compared with the same period in 2019.

In the first seven months of 2020, a total of 64,513 new private cars were licensed, a decrease of 33.1% compared with the same period last year. The number of used (imported) private cars licensed fell by 42.8% compared with the same period in 2019.

Electric and hybrid cars continue to grow in popularity. These vehicles accounted for 19.0% of new private cars licensed in the first seven months of 2020, compared with 12.3% in the same period in 2019. See table 6.

The licensing figures also show that:

  • Volkswagen (1,872) was the most popular make of new private car licensed followed by Toyota (1,813), Hyundai (1,351), Ford (1,313) and Skoda (1,168). Together these five makes represent 49.0% of all new private cars licensed in July 2020. See table 3.
  • In the first seven months of 2020, 43.5% of all new private cars licensed were diesel, compared with 46.5% in the same period for 2019. Of new private cars licensed in the same period, 94.3% were in the A/B CO2 emissions bands. See table 2B.
  • There was a decrease of 16.0% in the number of new goods vehicles licensed in July 2020 bringing the total to 2,298. See table 1.
  • In 2020 to date, 0.3% of imported private cars licensed were less than one year old (vehicles previously registered abroad in 2020) while 1,920 (5.5%) were ten years or older. See table 5 and figure 5.
  • There were 28,077 new diesel private cars licensed in the first seven months of 2020, compared with 44,769 in the same period in 2019. For used (imported) diesel private cars, the total licensed was 23,267 in the first seven months of 2020. This compares with 44,091 in the same period last year. See table 6.

Registration and licensing figures may differ in a given month for a number of reasons, some of which are outlined below:

  • Vehicles registered in the latter part of a particular month may not be licensed until a later month because of the time lapse between registration and first licensing.
  • In some cases, a vehicle may be registered by a dealership in advance of a sale.
  • Registered vehicles which are not used in a public place (e.g. tractors for use exclusively on the land) may not need to be licensed.

Seasonally adjusting the Vehicle Licensing series during the COVID-19 crisis period will be challenging until the scale and shape of its impact on the time series is better understood. The initial seasonally adjusted results might be revised for some months ahead as future observations become available. Users should be aware that there is increased uncertainty around the seasonally adjusted figures during this period.

Most popular makes of new cars, July 2020
Volkswagen 12.2
Toyota 11.8
Hyundai 8.8
Ford 8.6
Skoda 7.6
Other51
Most popular makes of new cars, July 2019
Volkswagen 11.3
Toyota 12.5
Hyundai 8.9
Ford 6.9
Skoda 7.7
Other52.7
Table 1: Number of vehicles licensed for the first time classified by taxation class
Taxation ClassJuly January - July
201820192020 201820192020
New vehicles    
New Private Cars 20,74318,74115,329 103,78096,38064,513
New Goods Vehicles 2,5072,7362,298 18,07717,04112,070
New Tractors 210244236 1,4481,6051,478
New Motor Cycles 209222324 1,0441,2841,090
New Exempt Vehicles 9549151,129 4,4644,3743,930
New Other 284196137 1,2711,339716
Total New Vehicles 24,90723,05419,453 130,084122,02383,797
       
Used (imported) vehicles       
Used private cars 8,2029,2038,275 58,47460,89734,856
Used goods vehicles 1,3371,3391,048 8,9738,9805,564
Used tractors 194243236 1,3861,6471,227
Used motorcycles 331384415 2,0792,3451,574
Used other vehicles 563606480 3,5604,0182,346
Total used vehicles 10,62711,77510,454 74,47277,88745,567
        
Total all vehicles 35,53434,82929,907 204,556199,910129,364
Table 2A: Number of new private cars licensed for the first time by CO2 emission band and fuel type, July 2020
BandFuel TypeTotal
PetrolDieselElectricPetrol & electric hybridDiesel & electric hybridPetrol or Diesel plug-in electric hybrid
A 4,0854,0535201,8666853711,129
B 15721,751065003,388
C 1023010400407
D 571880000245
E 564000069
F 779000086
G 1200003
Not available0200002
Total5,8296,4405201,9356853715,329
Table 2B: Number of new private cars licensed for the first time by CO2 emission band and fuel type, January-July 2020
BandFuel TypeTotal
PetrolDieselElectricPetrol & electric hybridDiesel & electric hybridPetrol or Diesel plug-in electric hybrid
A 16,54417,2662,3607,7432121,66645,791
B 6,8228,00302380015,063
C 5261,537012012,076
D 2257180000943
E 262590100286
F 2626501000301
G 2116000037
Not available313000016
Total24,19328,0772,3608,0042121,66764,513
Table 3: Number of new and used (imported) private cars licensed for the first time by make, July 2020
MakeJuly January - July
NewUsed (imported)Total NewUsed (imported)Total
Audi 6068761,4822,6063,7176,323
BMW 5498381,3872,2753,3445,619
Citroen 1721333055916421,233
Dacia 343243671,4471281,575
Fiat 42114156144439583
Ford 1,3138482,1614,8103,7748,584
Honda 1432684115831,1561,739
Hyundai 1,3515591,9106,0252,2228,247
Jaguar 5662118203278481
Kia 8782481,1263,8151,0364,851
Land Rover 1391152548864021,288
Lexus 5996155317359676
Mazda 215893049564631,419
Mercedes Benz 4966331,1292,0882,6274,715
Mini 7562137281327608
Mitsubishi 67124191326411737
Nissan 8735171,3904,2552,1996,454
Opel 32413251,34151,346
Peugeot 9781571,1353,3388034,141
Renault 7851629473,0897853,874
Seat 5181076252,2613342,595
Skoda 1,1682211,3895,0958995,994
Ssangyong 1922136541
Subaru 459433477
Suzuki 17552227624251875
Tesla 5085846427491
Toyota 1,8135222,3357,9482,05910,007
Vauxhall 023223201,1181,118
Volkswagen 1,8729222,7947,7263,89111,617
Volvo 2142174318208121,632
z. Other 326193120309429
z. Total 15,3298,27523,604 64,51334,85699,369
The information in this table is available in much greater detail in Databases (see StatBank link below)
X-axis labelUnadjusted dataAdjusted dataTrend
July 2015212901055810529
August 201585721116510846
September 201559241146611183
October 201539431135911490
November 201518741148911736
December 20158471169011917
January 2016271061226712005
February 2016211731254811993
March 2016200961152811889
April 2016148471197711737
May 2016101251125411613
June 201641431114511588
July 2016224621181711624
August 201697811199411654
September 201658421157411599
October 201638311176511442
November 201618461115411227
December 20166791029511008
January 2017266681124810817
February 2017169051056910676
March 2017171801082410571
April 2017134271042510493
May 201795811040410431
June 20173585972510365
July 2017213161107010266
August 201781051008210128
September 20174828101409976
October 2017325597309872
November 2017159495119821
December 201760193209826
January 201825813104659863
February 201816501104849918
March 20181608896559940
April 20181155793959940
May 20189362100689923
June 2018371699049901
July 201820743103279876
August 2018768195889827
September 2018439797489707
October 2018287482219544
November 2018164793489416
December 2018778112279359
January 20192227992289387
February 20191417892609476
March 20191440496849577
April 20191379498119642
May 2019912696029620
June 2019385899419510
July 20191874189839367
August 2019720292599247
September 2019410488939181
October 2019321491289155
November 2019167694189140
December 201972994709110
January 20202066587579063
February 20201326387428996
March 20201023964156394
April 20201338960941
May 202014901663
June 202021895000
July 2020153297395
Table 4: Seasonally adjusted number of vehicles licensed for the first time classified by taxation class
Taxation classJuly 2019June 2020July 2020Monthly % change
New vehicles    
New private cars 8,9835,0007,39547.9
New goods vehicles 2,1441,1811,78050.7
New tractors 18315317413.7
New motor cycles 14313121261.8
New exempt vehicles 48139559149.6
New other 14836103186.1
Total new vehicles 12,0826,89610,25548.7
    
Used (imported) vehicles    
Used private cars 9,1003,9338,208108.7
Used goods vehicles 1,250412975136.7
Used tractors 22179213169.6
Used motorcycles 30893333258.1
Used other vehicles 540159432171.7
Total used vehicles 11,4194,67610,161117.3
    
Total all vehicles 23,50111,57220,41676.4
X-axis label20162017201820192020 to date
<1 year old2.11.91.91.70.278287812715171
1-2 years old13.216.718.317.615.5927243516181
3-5 years old47.849.250.850.354.8972917144824
6-9 years old29.727.324.425.623.7233187973376
Over 10 years old7.34.84.64.85.50837732384668

Footnote: For the purpose of the analysis of the age profile of used (imported) private cars, calendar years were used to band the age groups. For example, a private car defined as less than one year old is an imported vehicle which has previously been registered abroad for the first time in the current calendar year.

Table 5: Number of new and used (imported) private cars licensed for the first time
Private cars20162017201820192020 Jan-July
New141,931127,045121,157113,30564,513
Used (imported) 70,13892,50899,456108,89534,856
Total212,069219,553220,613222,20099,369
% used (imported)33.1%42.1%45.1%49.0%35.1%
Table 6: Number of new and used (imported) private cars licensed for the first time by fuel type
Fuel typeNewUsed (imported)
July January - JulyJuly January - July
20192020 20192020 20192020 20192020
Petrol8,2565,829 39,74324,1931,7971,967 12,0398,007
Diesel7,7676,440 44,76928,0776,6915,379 44,09123,267
Electric512520 2,4552,3604240 303192
Hybrid2,2062,540 9,4139,883673889 4,4593,388
Other00 0000 52
Total18,74115,329 96,38064,513 9,2038,275 60,89734,856

Background Notes

Source

The vehicle licensing figures are compiled from data supplied by the Driver and Vehicle Computer Services Division of the Department of Transport, Tourism and Sport. The data provide details on the number of private cars, goods vehicles, motor cycles and other vehicles licensed for the first time in each city and county council, classified by make and size, during a given month.

History

The release titled 'Vehicles Licensed for the First Time' commenced in January 1993. It replaced the series previously published as 'Particulars of Vehicles Registered and Licensed for the First Time'.

In January 1993, separate systems for vehicle registration and licensing were introduced. The Office of the Revenue Commissioners became responsible for the compilation of vehicle registrations while the Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local Government retained responsibility for vehicle licensing. In January 2008, responsibility for vehicle licensing was transferred to the Department of Transport (which later became the Department of Transport, Tourism and Sport).

Motor tax charges are determined on the basis of CO2 emission level (using seven CO2 bands) for all new cars registered from 1 July 2008.

The licensing process where applicable follows the registration process.

Vehicle Licensing versus Vehicle Registration

The CSO produces vehicle licensing statistics on a monthly basis. Vehicle registration data has not been published on the CSO StatBank since June 2010.

Registration and licensing figures may differ in a given month for a number of reasons, some of which are outlined below:

  • Vehicles registered in the latter part of a particular month may not be licensed until a later month because of the time lapse between registration and first licensing.
  • In some cases, a vehicle may be registered by a dealership in advance of a sale.
  • Registered vehicles which are not used in a public place (e.g. tractors for use exclusively on the land) may not need to be licensed.

The question is often asked, which reflects better vehicle sales, licensing figures or registration figures?

In practice, on a monthly basis, the licensing data is probably a better reflection of sales. In some cases, a vehicle may be registered by a dealership in advance of a sale. Whereas, typically, vehicles are only licensed at the point of sale. However, if a vehicle is purchased towards the end of a month, the buyer may wish to defer collecting and licensing it until the start of the following month. So the issue is not clear-cut.

From 31 October 1999, detailed information on agricultural vehicles is no longer published in accordance with Commission Decision 92/157/EEC as upheld on 28 May 1998.

Seasonal adjustment

Seasonal adjustment for each taxation class is conducted using a direct seasonal adjustment approach. However, the overall vehicle totals are estimated using the indirect approach, i.e. the ‘Total new vehicles’ is derived by adding all the seasonally adjusted new vehicles taxation classes. The main reason for adopting the indirect approach is to attribute the monthly and annual changes in vehicle licensing to each of its taxation classes. Seasonal adjustment models are developed for each series based on unadjusted data spanning from July 1996 to the current period. These models are reviewed on an annual basis; however seasonal factors are updated each month.

The adjustments are completed by applying the X-13-ARIMA model, developed by the U.S. Census Bureau to the unadjusted data.  This methodology estimates seasonal factors while also taking into consideration factors that impact on the quality of the seasonal adjustment such as:

• Calendar effects, e.g. the timing of Easter,

• Outliers, temporary changes and level shifts in the series.

Seasonally adjusting the Vehicle Licensing series during the COVID-19 crisis period will be challenging until the scale and shape of its impact on the time series is better understood. The initial seasonally adjusted results might be revised for some months ahead as future observations become available. Users should be aware that there is increased uncertainty around the seasonally adjusted figures during this period. 

For additional information on the use of X-13-ARIMA see https://www.census.gov/srd/www/winx13/

Definitions

Private cars:  The term 'private cars' in this release, refers to privately licensed vehicles which include hire, fleet and certain commercial vehicles.

New and used vehicles:  The term 'new vehicles' refers to new vehicles which are licensed for use in a public place, in this country, for the first time. 'Used vehicles' refers to used vehicles which are licensed for use in a public place, in this country, for the first time. In the main used vehicles are imported.

Exempt:  The term 'exempt vehicles' in this release, refers to vehicles which are licensed for the first time but are exempt from liability to pay road tax.

Exempt vehicles can be divided into four main categories:

  • State-owned
  • Diplomatic
  • Fire services
  • Disabled Drivers

Electric hybrid:  means a vehicle that derives its motive power from a combination of an electric motor and an internal combustion engine and is capable of being driven on electric propulsion alone for a material part of its normal driving cycle.

Plug-in electric hybrid:  means a vehicle that derives its motive power from a combination of an electric motor and an internal combustion engine, where the electric motor derives its power from a battery that may be charged from the internal combustion engine and an alternating current (AC) electric mains supply and is capable of being driven on electric propulsion alone for a material part of its normal driving cycle.

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