Toyota’s 2025 Sales Surge Proves Pragmatism Still Wins in America

In a year when the auto industry continued to argue about EV adoption rates, pricing pressure, and what Americans really want to drive, Toyota quietly did what it does best: sell a lot of cars. Toyota Motor North America wrapped up 2025 with U.S. sales totaling 2,518,071 vehicles, an 8.0 percent increase over 2024, reinforcing the idea that consistency, affordability, and broad appeal still matter more than hype.

Nearly half of those vehicles—47 percent, to be exact—were electrified. Toyota moved 1.18 million electrified vehicles in 2025, marking a 17.6 percent jump year over year. That number includes hybrids, plug-ins, and EVs, and it underscores Toyota’s long-standing strategy of betting on gradual electrification rather than an all-in EV gamble. The result? Strong growth without alienating traditional buyers.

A Strong Finish, Even with an Electrified Pause

The fourth quarter told a slightly more nuanced story. Toyota sold 652,195 vehicles, up 8.1 percent, but electrified sales dipped 1.9 percent compared to Q4 2024. That mild slowdown carried into December, when overall sales climbed 10.3 percent, yet electrified vehicles were essentially flat on a volume basis.

That’s less a warning sign and more a reality check. Toyota’s hybrid-heavy portfolio continues to outperform pure EV strategies in a market where charging infrastructure and pricing still matter. Buyers may be pausing on full electrification, but they’re clearly not pausing on Toyotas.

Toyota Brand: The Main Engine Keeps Pulling

The Toyota division did most of the heavy lifting, finishing the year with 2,147,811 vehicles sold, up 8.1 percent. December alone saw an 11.8 percent increase, proof that staples like the Camry, Corolla, and RAV4 remain deeply entrenched in American driveways.

The formula isn’t complicated: recognizable nameplates, proven reliability, and pricing that still dips below the psychologically important $30,000 mark. Throw in a redesigned Tacoma and a hybrid RAV4 that continues to sell itself, and Toyota’s success feels less surprising and more inevitable.

Lexus: Quiet Confidence in the Luxury Lane

Lexus may not grab headlines the way German luxury brands do, but its numbers tell a compelling story. The brand posted 370,260 sales in 2025, up 7.1 percent, with steady quarterly growth and a modest December bump.

Luxury buyers are increasingly tech-focused and electrification-curious, and Lexus appears to be threading that needle without overreaching. Its growth suggests that a calm, quality-first approach still resonates in a segment often obsessed with performance stats and screen size.

The Bigger Picture

Toyota’s 2025 performance reinforces a lesson the industry keeps relearning: Americans value choice. Not everyone wants a full EV. Not everyone can afford one. Toyota’s mix of hybrids, gas-powered stalwarts, and selective electrification gives buyers options—and it’s paying off.

As Andrew Gilleland, Toyota Motor North America’s senior vice president of Automotive Operations, summed it up, affordability and accessibility remain central to the brand’s momentum. In a market chasing the next big thing, Toyota’s biggest strength may be its refusal to abandon what already works.

And judging by the numbers, it’s working just fine.

Source: Toyota

Bugatti Expands Its LEGO Garage With Two New Hypercar Sets

Bugatti has never been especially good at staying in its lane. The Veyron bulldozed the definition of “production car,” the Chiron Super Sport redefined what sanity looks like north of 300 mph, and the Bolide all but asked whether roads are even necessary. Now, in a move that somehow feels both inevitable and charmingly subversive, Bugatti is pushing its obsessive engineering ethos into a medium where tolerance stacks are measured in millimeters and horsepower is entirely imaginary.

Enter LEGO.

As of January 1, Bugatti and the LEGO Group have expanded their partnership with two new kits: the LEGO Technic Bugatti Chiron Pur Sport and the LEGO Speed Champions Bugatti Vision Gran Turismo. Their arrival means four Bugatti LEGO models are now on sale simultaneously—joining the Centodieci and Bolide—for the first time ever. That may not sound like headline news in the world of hypercars, but it is a quiet flex all the same: Bugatti has figured out how to scale its mythology from seven-figure machines to living-room coffee tables without losing the plot.

Let’s start with the Pur Sport, because if any Chiron variant was destined for a Technic set, it’s the one that treats agility like a personal mission. In the real world, the Chiron Pur Sport is the anti–top-speed special. Shorter gear ratios, reworked aero, less mass, and a chassis tuned for corners instead of continents make it the sharpest tool in the Chiron drawer. It’s the version for drivers who’d rather hunt apexes than brag about GPS screenshots.

The LEGO Technic interpretation mirrors that intent surprisingly well. At 771 pieces, it lands in the sweet spot between “weekend project” and “engineering exercise.” The orange-and-black livery is unmistakably Pur Sport, and the proportions are spot-on without drifting into cartoon territory. This isn’t just a static shell, either. You get working steering, opening doors and hood, and a brick-built homage to Bugatti’s iconic W16 tucked in back. It measures about 11 inches long, which is just enough presence to remind you that even a scaled-down Chiron still dominates whatever shelf it occupies.

More importantly, the Technic set captures the essence of Bugatti’s appeal: complexity with purpose. Nothing here feels ornamental. Like the real car, every visible mechanism exists because it should, not because it looks cool. Builders nine and up can tackle it, but the satisfaction curve is very much adult.

If the Pur Sport set is about mechanical honesty, the Vision Gran Turismo kit is about unfiltered imagination.

The Vision GT occupies a strange and wonderful corner of Bugatti history. Conceived for the Gran Turismo video game and revealed as a physical show car in 2015, it’s a love letter to the brand’s prewar racing dominance—filtered through a sci-fi lens. Think Type 57 Tank cues, Le Mans victories from the late 1930s, and a total disregard for modern homologation rules. It was never meant for streets or dealerships; it was built to look fast standing still and even faster in pixels.

The LEGO Speed Champions version distills that drama into 284 pieces, and somehow it works. The horseshoe grille is there. The exaggerated rear wing? Check. The eight-eye headlight signature, roof fin, and wide Michelin-branded tires all make the cut. There’s even a Bugatti-clad minifigure ready to slot into the single-seat cockpit, which feels like a knowing wink at the idea that this car only truly exists when someone’s playing pretend—whether with a controller or a pile of bricks.

At just over five inches long, the Vision Gran Turismo set is small enough to be approachable and affordable, but detailed enough to satisfy fans who know exactly why that roof fin matters. It’s less about mechanical function and more about form, attitude, and the kind of design freedom Bugatti rarely allows itself in the real world.

What makes this expanded LEGO lineup interesting isn’t just the novelty. It’s the way each model tells a different chapter of the Bugatti story. The Pur Sport is modern, technical, and driver-focused. The Vision Gran Turismo is historic and futuristic at the same time. Add in the Centodieci’s retro-modern excess and the Bolide’s track-only lunacy, and you’ve got a surprisingly complete portrait of a brand that refuses to be pinned down.

Bugatti’s managing director, Wiebke Ståhl, frames the collaboration as a way to expand the brand beyond a tiny circle of owners and into the hands of millions of fans, gamers, and performance obsessives. She’s not wrong. These sets don’t dilute the Bugatti mystique; they translate it. They let enthusiasts engage with the cars the same way Bugatti engineers do: by understanding how they’re put together and why they look the way they do.

Both new kits are supported by the LEGO Builder app, which offers 3D instructions, zoomable views, and progress tracking. It’s a modern touch that feels appropriate for a brand that has always blended old-world craftsmanship with cutting-edge tech.

No, snapping together plastic bricks won’t replicate the sensation of a W16 at full song. But for a brand built on imagination as much as excess, this feels like a natural extension. Bugatti may build cars for the one percent, but with LEGO, it’s inviting everyone else to sit down, clear some space on the floor, and build the dream piece by piece.

Source: Bugatti

BMW Cuts EV Prices in China, Including a $42K Drop on the i7 M70L

Price wars used to be something Chinese automakers did to Western brands. Now, they’re something legacy automakers are doing with them.

BMW is the latest to blink in China’s increasingly cutthroat auto market, announcing sweeping price reductions across 31 models. It’s a notable move for a brand that traditionally leans on prestige and pricing discipline—and a clear sign that even the blue-and-white roundel isn’t immune to the pressures of the world’s largest car market.

The headline grabber is the BMW i7 M70L, the long-wheelbase, dual-motor flagship of the electric 7-Series lineup. Packing 659 horsepower and a neck-snapping 811 lb-ft of torque, it now costs 301,000 yuan less than before—a haircut of roughly $42,000. That’s not a gentle nudge. That’s a shove.

The deepest cut by percentage, however, belongs to the iX1 eDrive25L. BMW trimmed 24 percent off the price of the long-wheelbase compact SUV, dropping its entry point to 228,000 yuan (about $32,600). In a segment flooded with aggressively priced domestic EVs, the iX1 suddenly looks far more competitive than its badge alone would have allowed.

Officially, BMW is playing it cool. Speaking to Bloomberg, the company framed the changes as part of its “regular price management,” noting that transaction prices are ultimately negotiated between dealers and buyers. That’s corporate-speak for don’t read too much into this.

But the timing tells a different story.

China’s auto market has shown clear signs of strain, with sales declining for a second consecutive month in November, according to the China Passenger Car Association. As growth slows, automakers—foreign and domestic alike—are scrambling to protect volume, even if it means trimming margins.

At the same time, regulators are trying to keep the chaos contained. New rules prohibit automakers from selling below production cost and ban dealer incentives that push prices beneath that line, an attempt to prevent a full-blown race to the bottom.

In that context, BMW’s price cuts look less like aggressive discounting and more like a formal acknowledgment of reality. According to Yale Zhang, managing director at Automotive Foresight, the revised stickers largely reflect what customers were already paying after negotiations. In other words, BMW didn’t undercut the market—it caught up to it.

And this likely isn’t the end.

With Chinese New Year landing in February, the industry’s traditional incentive season is fast approaching. At least 14 automakers have already launched discount or incentive programs since the start of 2026, and more are expected to follow as brands try to front-load first-quarter sales.

Zhang doesn’t see the trend fading anytime soon. Promotional cycles may fluctuate, he says, but sustained pricing pressure is now a structural feature of the Chinese market—not a temporary hiccup.

Regulators remain wary. Prolonged discounting raises the specter of deflation, supply-chain instability, and downward pressure on wages—risks that extend far beyond the showroom floor.

For BMW, though, the message is clear: in China, prestige alone no longer sells cars. Even the ultimate driving machine has to sharpen its pencil.

Source: BMW

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