Where Do Ram Trucks Sell The Best In The United States?
Edmunds Shows Us Where The Ram Lineup Has Success!
What are the most popular vehicles in the United States? According to data collected over the course of 2019, Edmunds.com put together an interactive map showcasing the most popular vehicles in sales for each state. Edmunds stated that vehicles included in the data set are exclusively retail registrations to individuals and do not include rental sales or registrations from government bodies and only new vehicle registrations were included.
The RAM brand’s portfolio of pickup trucks consisting of the Ram 1500, Ram 1500 Classic, Ram 2500, and Ram 3500, have been some of the best-selling vehicles across the United States and now thanks to Edmunds, we are seeing where those pickups are selling the best nationally. One Edmunds’ list, all four Ram pickups are combined in sales, just like the Chevrolet Silverado and Ford F-Series combined all of its half-ton and heavy-duty offerings.
So where do Ram Truck sell the best? Let’s take a look…
The Ram Trucks lineup outsold all other vehicles in five states (Alaska, Arkansas, Arizona, Nevada, and Wyoming). Of course, Ford’s F-Series placed second in all five of those states.
The Ram Truck lineup also showed up on the Top-5 list of 35 of the rest of the 50 states. The lineup took second place in 12 states (Colorado, Georgia, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, and Utah), third place in 16 states (Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Vermont, West Virginia, and Wisconsin), fourth place in 5 states (Alabama, Delaware, Indiana, New Hampshire, and Washington), and fifth place in two states (North Carolina and New York).
In the full-size truck segment, the Ram Truck lineup took the second place title in sales for the United States in 2019. It still has a lot of work to overtake Ford’s demanding lead, in which it was the best-selling vehicle in 31 states.
Source: Edmunds.com