auto dealer in black and red logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

How Are Consumers Shopping for Cars?

Understanding the differences in target audiences, their feelings about brand, loyalty, preferences, and shopping habits is vital for success.

by Mike Dickerson
May 26, 2020
How Are Consumers Shopping for Cars?

Understanding the differences in target audiences, their feelings about brand, loyalty, preferences, and shopping habits is vital for success.

Image by Free-Photos from Pixabay 

3 min to read


The automotive industry is a major economic force globally and, according to the American Automotive Policy Council, is the largest manufacturing sector in the U.S. As sales in the space continue to slow due to a variety of factors, like rising auto loan rates and overall economic uncertainty, it is more important than ever that those in the auto industry understand their consumers.

Many millennials are content to treat their vehicle as just another household appliance that doesn’t need to speak for them or reflect their personality and values.

Ad Loading...

Earlier this year, Alter Agents surveyed 1,094 recent purchasers of new vehicles to ask about their shopping attitudes and behaviors in the automotive category. Among new car buyers, younger drivers are replacing their vehicles much more often. In fact, 48% of drivers under the age of 40 are buying new vehicles every two years, while only 27% of those over 40 are doing so.

Those younger drivers have other unique behaviors of which the automotive industry should take note. Younger drivers are less locked into a particular brand or model, less satisfied with the options that they have, and more excited to try something new. In fact, 55% of those under 40 say that they enjoy trying new brands of cars. This places this category of drivers in what we call “promiscuous shoppers,” those shoppers who are less brand-loyal and more likely to experiment with new brands.

We chose to dive a little deeper into this important consumer segment and try to understand  consumers’ most basic emotional reactions to brands. To accomplish this, we gave them a few seconds to tell us whether they liked each major automotive brand. Among younger consumers, the preference was much higher for Tesla, Audi, Hyundai, and BMW than their older counterparts.

Drivers over 40 were more emotionally invested in their car choices. They have stronger opinions about what they like and don’t like, and they’re more likely to believe their car choices reflect their personalities. Overall, younger car buyers are less invested in brand loyalty than their older counterparts. This finding stands in stark contrast to common tropes about millennials, particularly that they’re seeking deep and meaningful emotional connectionswith brands.

Instead, younger consumers’ interest in an emotional connection is mediated by category, just as it is for older shoppers. Among older shoppers, who may have grown up in an American youth culture focused on cars, today’s younger shoppers simply don’t share that emotional connection to their vehicle, having grown up in a culture more focused on digital connectivity than physical mobility. While millennials may crave authentic experiences in some categories that they care about, this doesn’t seem to carry over to automobile shopping. Many millennials are content to treat their vehicle as just another household appliance that doesn’t need to speak for them or reflect their personality and values.

Ad Loading...

Experts are saying that the automotive industry is slowing faster than expected this year, and this trend will continue as we enter 2021. Understanding the differences in target audiences, their feelings about brand, loyalty, preferences and shopping habits is vital for success. Too much of the conversation about car buying has focused on an imagined idea of what younger consumers look like. While younger car customers differ from older consumers, these differences don’t necessarily line up with conventional wisdom around millennials. Beyond automotive, these counterintuitive findings demonstrate the importance of grounding research in a specific category and type of purchase, which can reveal new and unexpected things about the customers you’re trying to reach.

Mike Dickerson is a senior research manager at Los Angeles based market research consultancy, Alter Agents.

Read: Digital Security in 3 Easy Steps

Originally posted on F&I and Showroom

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Dealer Ops

two cars on a billboard, No Hidden Fees
ComplianceMay 1, 2026

Dealer Ads and the FTC

The agency has made it clear in recent enforcement actions and warnings, in auto retail and other industries, that advertised prices must include all nonoptional costs to the consumer.

Read More →
Closeup of white car's headlight, front end
Dealer Opsby Hannah MitchellApril 17, 2026

Used Autos Supply Dwindles

The March shopping surge, despite high prices, cut into inventory by the most since the thick of the pandemic, Cox Automotive analysts calculated.

Read More →
hands making protective frame over red car, Risk Reality Check, Be Proactive, Auto Dealer Today logo
Dealer OpsApril 1, 2026

Managing Risk Effectively Through Changing Times

The variables influencing risk pricing have changed significantly over the past five years. Being proactive and responsive to emerging trends is not optional but essential.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Car key, stacks of coins, and a paper car cutout with AutoPayPlus logo, representing auto financing, loan terms, and vehicle affordability trends.
Dealer Opsby StaffMarch 31, 2026

Survey Reveals What Won't Fix What's Breaking Car Sales

AutoPayPlus says extra-long auto loans are trapping consumers and threatening the dealer trade-in cycle, and that the industry is leveraging the wrong tools to combat high MSRPs.

Read More →
Headshots of two male executives
Dealer Opsby StaffMarch 24, 2026

IA American Appoints Two Execs

Senior vice presidents of the company's agent and dealer channels chosen to support general agents and help auto dealers with sales and performance.

Read More →
Dealer Opsby StaffSeptember 8, 2025

Cox Automotive Acquires Inspection Firm

Full ownership of Alliance Inspection Management, or AiM, meant to unlock growth for Manheim inspection capabilities

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Dealer Opsby StaffAugust 26, 2025

Assurant Expands Partnership With Holman

Extended collaboration delivers training, products and performance development to 30 newly acquired Holman dealerships

Read More →
Dealer Opsby Hannah MitchellAugust 26, 2025

Franchises, Throughput Down in First Half

A handful of states see franchise growth through June, while EV sales per store boost overall business in U.S.

Read More →
Dealer OpsAugust 25, 2025

How to Build a High-Performance Sales and F&I Team

Performance and profits start with people chosen and led the right way.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Dealer Opsby Hannah MitchellAugust 19, 2025

Buy-Sells Up in Q2

Kerrigan metrics show there’s plenty of demand, though many sellers are waiting to pull the trigger.

Read More →