20052000s

SUVs went mainstream. GPS replaced glove-box atlases.

4,168
Variants this year
145 hp
Average power
7.5 L
Avg consumption
10.8s
Avg 0–100 km/h
Hatchback
Top body · 30%
01 — Body mix

What shape dominated.

Distribution of 4,168 2005 variants by body type.

hatchback30%
wagon22%
sedan21%
mpv14%
Hatchback
30.3%
Wagon
21.7%
Sedan
21.3%
Mpv
14.1%
Suv
5.4%
Cabriolet
3.8%
Coupe
3.4%
02 — Fuel mix

What moved them.

Petrol still dominates in absolute volume in 2005, but the share is sliding to electric and hybrid year over year.

petrol59%
diesel41%
Petrol
59.3%
Diesel
40.6%
Lpg
0.1%
03 — Top picks

The standouts of 2005.

Quickest, most powerful, most efficient — from variants documented with a 2005 model year.

In context · 2000s

SUVs went mainstream. GPS replaced glove-box atlases.

The crossover SUV arrived in volume — Toyota RAV4, Honda CR-V, Nissan X-Trail — and then in luxury, with BMW X5 and Porsche Cayenne legitimising the body in markets that had previously refused it. Common-rail diesel peaked at ~55% of new EU sales by 2009. Hybrid went mass-market with the Prius Mk2.

Toyota Prius Mk2BMW X5Volkswagen Passat B5.5Mini R50
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