KEY POINTS
  • Data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York show that 7 million Americans were at least three months behind on their car payments at the end of 2018, which is 1 million more than in 2010.
  • Among subprime borrowers — those with credit scores below 620— the overall delinquency rate stood at 16.3 percent in mid-2018, other data shows. In 2015, that figure was 12.4 percent.
  • The average amount financed for a car is $31,707 and the average loan length is 69.1 months, up from 61 in 2010.

As Americans' appetite for new cars continues unabated, an advocacy group is sounding the alarm over the growing level of auto debt carried by U.S. consumers.

In a report issued Wednesday, U.S. PIRG warns that the continuing rise in auto debt is putting many consumers in a financially vulnerable position, which could worsen during an economic downturn.