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Auto Loan Delinquencies Jump 50% as Car Prices Reach New Heights

<p>Customers browse vehicles at a dealership in Miami.</p>

Customers browse vehicles at a dealership in Miami.

Car loans have gone from the safest consumer credit products to among the riskiest over the last 15 years as delinquencies rose more than 50%, driven by soaring car prices and rising interest rates, a new study shows.

Most Read from Bloomberg

Consumers across all income categories are struggling to make monthly car payments, according to VantageScore, a credit-scoring company.

Auto loans were once a safe haven, with drivers prioritizing payments on their transportation above other debts, but delinquencies on car loans have jumped since 2010. The opposite is true for credit cards, personal loans and other forms of consumer credit.

VantageScore found that, in relative terms, monthly car payments are increasing faster than mortgage payments.

“We’re seeing the cost of cars and the cost related to car ownership increase enormously,” Rikard Bandebo, VantageScore’s chief economist, said in an interview. “In the past five years, it has increased even faster.”

Since 2019, new car prices have risen more than 25% and now top $50,000 on average, according to researcher Cox Automotive. The average monthly payment on a new car was $767 in the third quarter, and one in five borrowers pay more than $1,000 a month, according to automotive researcher Edmunds.com. Interest rates on new car loans now top 9%, exacerbating an automotive affordability crisis.

“That’s a double whammy,” Bandebo said. “You’ve been hit by the increased cost of the car and then the financing cost of the car.”

No income group is immune. Prime and near prime borrowers, who typically have good credit scores, are actually missing car payments at a faster rate than subprime consumers since lenders tightened financing criteria for the lowest rung borrowers three years ago, the study found.

“The higher income you have, you tend to at least feel that you can own a more expensive car,” Bandebo said.

The average auto loan balance has grown 57% since 2010, outpacing all other credit products, VantageScore found.

To get a more affordable monthly payment, car buyers are stretching the length of loans to seven years or more. That is leaving an increasing number of consumers “upside-down” on their loans, meaning they owe more than the car is worth.

The trend of missing car payments is unlikely to reverse with American consumers continuing to buy more expensive trucks and sport-utility vehicles. Automakers are also offering fewer affordable models.



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<p>Customers browse vehicles at a dealership in Miami.</p>

Customers browse vehicles at a dealership in Miami.

Car loans have gone from the safest consumer credit products to among the riskiest over the last 15 years as delinquencies rose more than 50%, driven by soaring car prices and rising interest rates, a new study shows.

Most Read from Bloomberg

Consumers across all income categories are struggling to make monthly car payments, according to VantageScore, a credit-scoring company.

Auto loans were once a safe haven, with drivers prioritizing payments on their transportation above other debts, but delinquencies on car loans have jumped since 2010. The opposite is true for credit cards, personal loans and other forms of consumer credit.

VantageScore found that, in relative terms, monthly car payments are increasing faster than mortgage payments.

“We’re seeing the cost of cars and the cost related to car ownership increase enormously,” Rikard Bandebo, VantageScore’s chief economist, said in an interview. “In the past five years, it has increased even faster.”

Since 2019, new car prices have risen more than 25% and now top $50,000 on average, according to researcher Cox Automotive. The average monthly payment on a new car was $767 in the third quarter, and one in five borrowers pay more than $1,000 a month, according to automotive researcher Edmunds.com. Interest rates on new car loans now top 9%, exacerbating an automotive affordability crisis.

“That’s a double whammy,” Bandebo said. “You’ve been hit by the increased cost of the car and then the financing cost of the car.”

No income group is immune. Prime and near prime borrowers, who typically have good credit scores, are actually missing car payments at a faster rate than subprime consumers since lenders tightened financing criteria for the lowest rung borrowers three years ago, the study found.

“The higher income you have, you tend to at least feel that you can own a more expensive car,” Bandebo said.

The average auto loan balance has grown 57% since 2010, outpacing all other credit products, VantageScore found.

To get a more affordable monthly payment, car buyers are stretching the length of loans to seven years or more. That is leaving an increasing number of consumers “upside-down” on their loans, meaning they owe more than the car is worth.

The trend of missing car payments is unlikely to reverse with American consumers continuing to buy more expensive trucks and sport-utility vehicles. Automakers are also offering fewer affordable models.

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