Grey has remained the UK’s favourite new car colour after taking top spot for the first time in 2018, newly published data from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) suggests.
It says that the number of grey cars registered in the year rose 5.3% to 521,273 - more than one in five new cars (22.6%) sold is now painted grey.
Black and white rounded out the top three colours of the paint chart, meaning 60.7% of all new cars joining British roads in 2019 were shades of monochrome, although registrations of black cars were down 2.4% and white cars down -4.1%.
The top 10 was largely unaltered year-on-year, save for the reappearance in 10th place of yellow, which was knocked out in 2018 by beige.
Mike Hawes, SMMT Chief Executive, said: “For most buyers, the colour is the first of many options they’ll select on their new car, and today there are more possibilities to personalise your car than ever before.
“Drivers can choose from many hundreds of models equipped with the latest low and zero emission powertrains, advanced safety and connected tech and exciting comfort and convenience features.
“There really is something to suit every driving need – and colour taste – on the market in 2020.”
With the overall new car market down 2.4% in 2019 to some 2.3 million units, just grey and turquoise increased their numbers in the 12 months, the latter up 29.3% with 2,358 registrations.
Silver, which has been in the top three 16 times in the last two decades, posted its lowest number of registrations for 20 years, with 201,008 models specified in the colour.
Grey remained consistently the favourite choice across the UK in 2019, apart from in Scotland and the Channel Islands, where white was the preferred.
Nationwide, meanwhile, the least popular colours were maroon, cream and pink, combined taking less than 1% of all registrations.
There were different tastes on show at opposite ends of the market – the smallest cars in the mini segment were more likely to be white, while executive and luxury saloon cars were more commonly found in black.
Diesel and petrol drivers tended to opt for grey, but the most popular colour for zero emission battery electric vehicles was white.
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