Porsche 911 Tops Andorra's 2025 Vehicle Registrations
Porsche 911 leads with 86 units, up 16%, while Toyota Yaris Cross takes second; contrasts sharply with Spain's budget Dacia Sandero dominance.
Key Points
- Porsche 911: 86 registrations (+16% YoY), €150k base price.
- Toyota Yaris Cross 2nd (63 units), SEAT Arona 3rd (57).
- Brands: BMW 204, Mercedes 200, VW Group dominates overall.
- Spain contrast: Dacia Sandero leads at €13.5k.
The Porsche 911 has once again topped vehicle registrations in Andorra for 2025, with 86 units recorded—a 16% increase from the previous year and three more than in 2024. Its base price in the Principat stands at around €150,000, according to sector sources.
This continues a trend from 2024, when the model also led sales. However, Porsche's overall dominance appears less pronounced this year compared to last, when the Cayenne (46 units) and Macan (45 units) also ranked highly, outpacing mainstream options like the SEAT Ateca, Hyundai i20, Hyundai Tucson, and Renault Clio.
In second place for 2025 came the Toyota Yaris Cross with 63 registrations, followed by the SEAT Arona at 57. The top 10 also featured the Mercedes-Benz GLC, MINI Cooper E, CUPRA Formentor, and CUPRA Terramar. Notably, the Ford Tourneo Custom van tied with the Hyundai Tucson at 36 units each, securing spots in the list alongside more conventional models like the Renault Clio.
By brand, BMW led with 204 registrations, ahead of Mercedes (200), Toyota (164), Ford (160), and Porsche (159). When grouping by parent companies, Volkswagen Group dominated, combining sales from Volkswagen, Porsche, Lamborghini, Skoda, Audi, SEAT, and CUPRA—mirroring broader European patterns.
In contrast, Spain's best-seller was the Dacia Sandero, with a base price of €13,500 per dealer lists. It repeated as the leader from 2024, followed by the Renault Clio, MG ZS, SEAT Ibiza, Hyundai Tucson, Toyota Corolla, SEAT Arona, Peugeot 2008, Peugeot 208, and Nissan Qashqai. Brand rankings there placed Toyota first, then Renault, Volkswagen, Hyundai, SEAT, and Dacia.
The Porsche 911's prominence reflects Andorra's market dynamics, similar to other microstates like Monaco, where high-end cars coexist with compact, practical vehicles suited to narrow streets and limited parking. No BMW models appeared in the top 10 individuals, despite the brand's aggregate lead.
Original Sources
This article was aggregated from the following Catalan-language sources: