Shopping for a car used to be an exciting occasion, but for some buyers, excitement is getting priced out of the market as they have to dig much deeper to afford it.

Prices have risen so much, the average used car sells for about the same as a new car did in 2018.

Autotrader.ca put the average cost of a new car at $63,264 in the third quarter last year, with a used at $36,911. It doesn’t have comparable statistics before 2021, but auto lender Birchwood Credit said the average price of a new vehicle in September 2018 was $36,100, while a used car then was about $19,400.

Tariffs, the impact of COVID-19 on supply chains and broader inflationary pressures have all driven vehicle prices higher, said Iacob Koch-Weser, an associate director for trade and investment at Boston Consulting Group.

He said that before the pandemic, the automotive industry saw lower input costs for some of the raw materials used in vehicle production, such as steel and aluminum. The trade environment was also very different as it was still based on decades of cross-border integration under free-trade policies.

Then, just as the auto sector was normalizing from supply chain shocks, U.S. President Donald Trump imposed tariffs on steel and aluminum, as well as a blanket 35-per-cent tariff rate that could only be avoided if goods were compliant with the Canada-United-States-Mexico free-trade agreement, or CUSMA.

Previously, many Canadian companies hadn’t pursued that designation, deciding the record-keeping and other paperwork wasn’t worth the bother when duties were effectively nil.

Exporters rushed to certify their goods after the sudden policy change, with Koch-Weser pointing to “fairly stringent content requirements” for vehicles, some of which have led to higher costs because of required supply chain changes.

“All of that is quite different from where we were around 2018, when there was more (of) a global supply chain with fairly low tariff rates all around,” he said.

Koch-Weser said the tariff shock only adds to other pressures facing consumers.

“The consumer has a more constrained wallet today in general given the higher headline inflation overall and the impact tariffs are having in other consumer-facing industries,” he said.

Daniel Ross, a senior manager of industry insights at Canadian Black Book, said vehicle prices were on a trajectory to recover in 2024 after the market normalized following the pandemic, but then U.S. tariffs put pressure on the market.

Vehicle prices may be near their peak now that the first shock of tariffs has been “digested” through the industry, he said.

Story Continues