ranking the most popular car colors in americaAn analysis of the North American automotive landscape over the last three decades reveals a stark shift in consumer and dealership purchasing behavior, resulting in a market heavily dominated by monochromatic tones.According to a comprehensive data study by automotive research firm iSeeCars, which evaluated more than 22 million used vehicle transactions spanning model years 1996 through 2025, grayscale tones-specifically white, black, gray, and silver-now account for 80.4 percent of the entire automotive market. This is a dramatic escalation from 1996, when those same four tones comprised less than half of all vehicles on the road at 47.3 percent.ranking the most popular car colors in americaThe data indicates that white maintains its position as the most popular automotive color, holding a 25.7 percent market share for the 2025 model year, up from 22.1 percent in 1996. Black secured the second position at 23.4 percent, experiencing a 64.5 percent surge in market share over the 30-year window.AdvertisementAdvertisementHowever, the most substantial movement occurred with gray, which experienced a 528.4 percent increase in frequency, rising from a negligible 3.6 percent share in 1996 to 22.9 percent by 2025. Conversely, silver has retracted significantly from its peak popularity in the mid-2000s when it approached 19 percent share, settling back down to 8.4 percent today.RankColor2025 Market Share1996 Market Share% Change1White25.7%22.1%16.7%2Black23.4%14.2%64.5%3Gray22.9%3.6%528.4%4Blue9.1%10.2%-10.8%5Silver8.4%7.3%14.3%6Red7.0%20.1%-65.2%7Green2.2%13.4%-83.8%8Brown0.4%2.9%-84.6%9Beige0.4%1.6%-73.8%10Orange0.3%0.2%2.5%11Yellow0.1%0.3%-59.4%12Gold0.0%2.3%-98.1%13Purple0.0%0.7%-94.7%A Chromatic CrisisThe displacement of chromatic options has largely come at the expense of red and green, which were prominent choices in the late 1990s. In 1996, red was the second most common choice on the market at 20.1 percent, and green sat in fourth place at 13.4 percent. By 2025, red collapsed by 65.2 percent to land at a 7.0 percent market share, while green fell by 83.8 percent, now appearing on just 2.2 percent of vehicles. Blue remains the strongest surviving chromatic choice at 9.1 percent, actually outperforming silver in the current market hierarchy.Aside from orange, which saw a minor uptick from 0.2 percent to 0.3 percent, niche choices like yellow, gold, and purple have effectively vanished from volume production.ranking the most popular car colors in americaThis chromatic contraction varies slightly by vehicle segment, though the underlying theme remains uniform. Grayscale choices find their highest concentration in the pickup truck sector, where they command 83.5 percent of total sales, driven largely by fleet purchasing and conservative corporate ordering strategies.AdvertisementAdvertisementSports cars remain the lone holdout for traditional colors; non-grayscale finishes maintain a 36.2 percent market share in this enthusiast-focused category. While the long-term trend lines clearly point toward a monochromatic fleet, iSeeCars analysts note that the grayscale market share has plateaued near the 80-percent mark since 2020, suggesting that the industry may have finally reached the floor for buyers demanding actual color on their vehicles.Become an AutoGuide insider. Get the latest from the automotive world first by subscribing to our newsletter here.