The Holden Commodore was the best-selling car in Australia from 1998 to 2010. Having passed that honour on to Mazda and then eventually Toyota and now Ford, the once-iconic Australian auto brand never recovered.

Going back to 2015, Australia’s best-selling car was the Toyota Corolla with 42,073 deliveries, representing 3.64 per cent of the total market of 1,155,408 vehicles. From there, the baton was passed to the Toyota HiLux, which became the annual leader for seven consecutive years (2016-2022). Then the Ford Ranger took over as the nation’s best-seller in 2023, and continued to hold the top spot in 2024 and 2025.

That ‘winner list’ is short, but the underlying sales volumes are not. The HiLux’s peak year in this dataset was 2022, when it found 64,391 new homes and accounted for 5.95 per cent of the entire market. The Ranger era is also strong, even as overall competition and model proliferation increase. The Ranger finished 2025 with 56,555 deliveries, or 4.56 per cent of the total market of 1,241,037, at a time when there have never been more utes on sale in Australia.

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Between 2015 and 2025 the annual best-seller increased from 42,073 to 56,555 deliveries, a lift of 14,482 vehicles. That’s an important little side note, because despite more competition, more brands and more models, the total market grew by a much smaller margin over the same period, from 1,155,408 to 1,241,037. The top-selling model’s market share is therefore a useful signal. It increased from 3.64 per cent in 2015 to a high of 5.95 per cent in 2022, before settling back to 4.56 per cent in 2025.

That pattern aligns neatly with the broader shift, as passenger cars shrank dramatically in popularity over the decade, while SUVs and light commercials expanded. The best-seller story is simply that shift expressed as a single line item: first a mainstream passenger nameplate (Corolla), then a ute (HiLux), then another ute (Ranger) that better matches where demand and product momentum sit in the 2020s.

The change isn’t just in who wins, but in what the top 10 looks like at the beginning versus the end of the dataset.

In 2015, the top 10 list was heavy with household passenger-car nameplates: Corolla led, followed by Mazda3, with the Hyundai i30, Commodore, and Toyota Camry also inside the 10. Utes were present (HiLux, Ranger, Mitsubishi Triton), and an SUV (the Mazda CX-5) also appeared, but the ‘centre of gravity’ still leaned towards passenger cars.