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2025 Rental Vehicle Remarketing Summary And Outlook

The year brought modest and flatter results across wholesale values, total off-rental supply, and rental risk units.

by Jeremy Robb, Cox Automotive
January 16, 2026
An orange and purple bar graph shows average rental car prices and mileage levels from October 2024 to October 2025.

At the end of October, prices are slightly higher than at the same time in the previous three years, despite spending most of the year below 2023 and 2022 levels.

Credit: Cox Automotive

4 min to read


For most of 2024, wholesale values continued to correct from their 2021 peak, with the Manheim Used Vehicle Value Index ending December 2024 up 0.4% year over year, slightly below the typical observed rate.

The year began with significant year-over-year declines and depreciation rates higher than those typically observed in the first half of the year.

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However, the declines became increasingly muted as the year progressed, eventually turning positive by year-end, as the contraction in lease maturities reduced wholesale market supply.

New-vehicle sales were quite strong at the end of the year, bolstering used-vehicle sales and creating some scarcity in the wholesale market.

The first quarter of 2025 maintained this modestly positive trajectory, with values hovering slightly above prior-year levels. Then in spring, the wholesale market experienced a notable surge.

From April through June, values increased sharply as tariffs raised wholesale prices, pushing new-vehicle prices higher, with year-over-year gains peaking at 6.3% in June. This represented the strongest period of growth since the post-pandemic peak began unwinding.

However, that strength soon waned, and the market cooled through the summer months, with July and August showing more moderate gains of 2.9% and 1.7%, respectively.

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By fall, the momentum had largely evaporated. September held at 2% year over year, but October saw a sharp monthly decline of 2%, bringing the year-over-year comparison to essentially flat.

The wholesale market remains relatively tight relative to the longer-term run rate, as measured by days’ supply. Current days’ supply at Manheim sits at 27.3 days, less than last year’s level of 28.4 days.

Looking at segment performance, there’s clear divergence: luxury vehicles and EVs continue to show strength (up 3.6% and 3.9% Y/Y, respectively, in October), while traditional sedan segments—particularly compact and midsize cars—are experiencing notable declines of 6.5% and 4.6%.

These factors have led to a forecast that vehicle values will be only 0.5% higher at the end of 2025, with a more normal increase expected by the end of 2026.  The market typically rises by about 2% per year due to the inflationary effects of new vehicles entering the wholesale market over time.

A dark blue bar graph chart showing wholesale rental volume estimates from 2018-2029.

Sales into rental are estimated to be 14% higher than last year for the rental segment of the fleet, but this hasn’t translated into a higher volume of wholesale rental disposals.

Credit: Cox Automotive

Total Wholesale Supply Off-Rental (Rental Wholesale)

Rental companies have had more options to purchase new fleet vehicles in recent years due to increased supply, which has enabled the disposal of rental units into wholesale markets and contributed to a rebound in recent years.

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Rental volumes in wholesale markets increased by about 17% in 2024, although we have seen a slight slowdown in this segment in 2025. Sales into rental are estimated to be 14% higher than last year for the rental segment of the fleet, but this hasn’t translated into a higher volume of wholesale rental disposals, according to Bobit Business Media data.

As we’ve seen in key dealer segments, more used-vehicle operators are adjusting how they source and sell units, and the impact of tariffs means operators can retail a higher proportion of used vehicles rather than bring them to auction.

While new rental fleet purchases are much higher, we expect wholesale volume to decline by almost 1% for the full year 2025 before rising modestly in 2026.

Rental car companies have many more options for disposing of end-of-service units and are continually innovating their disposal methods.

We believe that growth in the direct-to-consumer channel will continue to limit the flow of those units into the wholesale channel.

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Rental wholesale volumes are projected to grow from about 1.1 million units in 2025 to a peak of about 1.1 million in 2026 before gradually declining to just over 1 million by 2029.

While this represents stability in the near term, these volumes remain well below the two million units we saw in 2019, reflecting the structural shift in how rental companies are managing 
fleet disposition.

The balance between wholesale and direct-to-consumer channels will continue to evolve as companies optimize their remarketing strategies.

Rental Risk Units: Average Auction Price / Mileage

Wholesale prices for rental risk units have remained above pre-pandemic levels, showing more movement this year than in the previous year.

At the end of October, prices are slightly higher than at the same time in the previous three years, despite spending most of the year below 2023 and 2022 levels.

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Overall, rental price trends have followed a pattern similar to that of the used-car market, rising in the early part of the year before trending downward more recently.

Prices are not expected to fall meaningfully in 2026 and are expected to follow the overall wholesale market, with a stronger-than-normal spring rebound anticipated due to a stronger-than-normal tax refund season.

Mileage bands for rental risk units run through auctions shot higher at the start of 2025 but have since been trending down and now sit below last year’s levels at this time.  This is the lowest mileage reading for this time of year since 2020, though it remains above pre-pandemic levels. This drop in mileage is most likely due to an increase in younger model-year vehicles entering auction after the post-pandemic period, when much higher-mileage units were prevalent.

However, rental companies have multiple options for disposing of units, and consignors are expected to continue retailing a greater percentage of the lowest-mileage risk units rather than sending them to auction. This shift in practice should keep auction units’ mileage higher than the overall average. 

Jeremy Robb is the deputy chief economist at Cox Automotive.

This article originally appeared in the print edition of the 2026 ARN Annual Fact Book.


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