Based on their credit behavior, electric vehicle buyers in the U.S. market still resemble the first wave of upscale EV buyers who can afford what amounts to a battery-powered luxury vehicle, according to a recent study from TransUnion, the Chicago-based credit bureau.
That’s significant because the eventual mass-market rollout of electric vehicles depends on thriftier, less-wealthy borrowers getting onboard the EV bandwagon, as more-affordable EVs hit the market.
So far, there’s a small but growing number of mainstream-brand and mainstream-priced EVs, from makes like Ford, Toyota, Hyundai, Kia, Subaru, Jeep, and Honda.
The TransUnion study said EVs accounted for 8.3% of U.S. new-vehicle sales in the second quarter of 2023, more than double 4% share in the third quarter of 2021.
“Many new models have hit the market,” said Satyan Merchant, senior vice president and automotive business lead for TransUnion, in a phone interview.
However, the credit profile of the mainstream-brand EV buyer continues to remain stronger than that of the mainstream-brand buyer of vehicles with an internal-combustion engine, he said.
More than 60% of mainstream-brand EV buyers in the study had credit scores in the “super-prime” segment, defined as credit scores above 780. That was in line with luxury-brand buyers, for both EVs and internal-combustion vehicles.
The average credit score for mainstream-brand EV buyers is 774, the study said.
At the same time, buyers with subprime credit, defined as credit scores 600 and below, made up 5% of mainstream-brand, internal-combustion buyers, but only 1% of mainstream-brand EV buyers, the study said. The subprime segment has a similar share among luxury brands, TransUnion said.
Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/jimhenry/2023/11/30/mass-market-evs-start-to-show-but-early-buyers-are-still-upscale/