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Nobody wants these cars: May 2025

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The cars nobody wants in May 2025

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These 10 new vehicles have the highest inventory in America—dealers can’t move them, and buyers aren’t biting. (Data from CarEdge)

Jaguar F-Pace: luxury SUV, luxury problem

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With a staggering 235-day supply and just 592 units sold, the F-Pace is rotting on lots. Add in high depreciation, expensive fuel, and poor reliability—buyers are staying far away.

Volkswagen ID.4: EV fatigue is real

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The ID.4 has 4,395 units sitting unsold. As better electric crossovers hit the market, buyers are skipping VW’s aging entry.

Audi Q4 e-tron: slow, expensive, and unwanted

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Over 2,200 units are stuck at dealers with few takers. For $58K, buyers expect more range and refinement—Audi isn’t delivering.

Ford Mustang Mach-E: Sales losing horsepower

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Once a hot EV, the Mach-E now lags with 14,000 units for sale. Buyers are turning to better value options from Hyundai and Chevy.

Porsche Taycan: $143K EV no one is buying

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Despite the badge, the Taycan is sitting still. With a 185-day supply and sky-high price tag, luxury EV fatigue is hitting Porsche hard.

Cadillac CT4: Leftovers from yesterday’s luxury

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The CT4 just isn’t connecting with buyers. Nearly 3,000 units remain unsold as Cadillac struggles to reinvent itself.

Range Rover Velar: Style over substance isn’t selling

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Land Rover’s Velar is stuck in a holding pattern. Buyers want more reliability and value—and this $72K SUV doesn’t offer either.

Audi A8: flagship sedan, forgotten car

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The A8’s days are numbered. With only 148 units sold and 560 in stock, even Audi fans are ignoring this $96K relic.

Genesis G90: Overlooked luxury, underwhelming demand

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Genesis can’t gain traction in the flagship sedan space. The G90 is well-reviewed but widely ignored, with nearly four times more cars on lots than sold.

Infiniti QX55: A coupe SUV nobody asked for

Coupe-styled crossovers are a tough sell—and Infiniti’s QX55 proves it. Sales are sluggish, and dealer lots are overflowing.

Buyers are walking away—and fast

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These models represent a clear trend: buyers are rejecting overpriced, underperforming, or outdated vehicles. The message to automakers is clear—evolve or stay stuck.