The Great Migration: Why Used Car Price Trends are Skyrocketing in 2026
If you were hoping for a bargain in the pre-owned lot, you might want to brace your wallet. According to the latest data from Cox Automotive, Used Car Price Trends have officially hit a three-year peak. The Manheim Used Vehicle Value Index—a key tracker of wholesale prices—surged 6.2% year-over-year this past month, reaching its highest level since the summer of 2023.
The driver behind this spike? A massive influx of “refugee” buyers. With new car prices flirting with the $50,000 mark (averaging roughly $49,100), potential owners are flooding the used market, causing a supply-and-demand collision that is pushing values higher.

By the Numbers: The New vs. Used Divide
Despite the recent climb in used car costs, the “value gap” remains a powerful draw for consumers. As of February, the average used car transaction price sat at $25,287—nearly half the cost of a brand-new model.
However, finding that “perfect” used car is getting harder:
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Inventory Crunch: The available supply of used vehicles dropped below 40 days last month, the tightest levels seen all year.
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Trade-in Trouble: Because new car sales have been sluggish, fewer people are trading in their old rides, which has choked off the primary source of used inventory.
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Resilient Demand: Even with geopolitical tensions and fluctuating gas prices, the “Spring Bounce” and healthy tax refunds have kept buyer interest at a fever pitch.
A “Sellers’ Market” in the Lanes
Jeremy Robb, Chief Economist at Cox Automotive, noted that despite global uncertainties, the data is undeniable: demand is robust. “Used-vehicle demand is healthy, and inventory levels are relatively tight,” Robb explained. This is reflected in the “sales conversion rate,” which hit 68.2% in March—well above the three-year average—meaning dealers are aggressively outbidding each other for whatever inventory is left.
The Road Ahead: Forecast Update
Due to this stronger-than-expected start, Cox Automotive has nudged its full-year retail sales forecast upward to 20.4 million units (from 20.3 million).
But don’t expect the rally to last forever. Analysts predict a “softer second half” for 2026. While the spring season is currently in overdrive, high financing costs and a projected 1% decline in total annual sales compared to last year suggest that the market might finally catch its breath by autumn.
The Bottom Line: If you’re looking to sell, now is your golden window. If you’re looking to buy, you’re competing in one of the tightest markets in years.
BY HOONSIK WOO [woo.hoonsik@koreadaily.com]


