Cheap new cars are already on life support.
Prices have been climbing for years, entry-level trims are disappearing, and what used to be a $20,000 car is now pushing $30,000, if it even exists at all.
Now, automakers are warning that things could get even worse.
Because if current trade policies don’t change, the last truly affordable cars in America might disappear entirely.
The $20K Car Is Already Gone

Not long ago, buyers could still find a brand-new car for under $20,000.
Now? That segment is basically extinct. Models like the Nissan Versa were among the last holdouts, and even they’ve been pushed out as pricing pressure and shrinking margins took over.
At the same time, the average new car price has ballooned to around $50,000. That’s not a small increase, it’s a completely different market.
Tariffs Are The Real Problem

According to industry leaders, tariffs are a major reason why affordable cars are disappearing.
Even vehicles built in the U.S. rely heavily on parts from Canada and Mexico. We’re talking transmissions, seats, electronics, critical components that cross borders multiple times before a car is finished.
Add tariffs into that mix, and suddenly the math stops working.
Cheap cars already operate on razor-thin margins, so it doesn’t take much to turn them into money losers.
Popular Models Could Be Next

If the situation doesn’t improve, some of the most recognizable entry-level cars could be on the chopping block.
That includes models like the Honda Civic and Toyota Corolla.
Even though they’re built in the U.S., they still depend on a global supply chain, and if that supply chain gets too expensive, automakers may simply stop offering them in their current form, or at all.
Carmakers Are Already Losing Money

Executives aren’t sugarcoating it, as some brands admit they’re already losing money on their cheapest models.
Tariffs on materials like steel and aluminum, combined with duties on parts and finished vehicles, are eating into profits from every direction, and when a car stops making money, it doesn’t stick around for long.
That’s just how the business works.
What Happens Next?

Automakers are pushing for updates or renewals to trade agreements like USMCA to stabilize costs and keep affordable cars viable.
Without that, the industry could shift even further toward higher-priced vehicles, simply because that’s where the margins are.
For buyers, that’s bad news, because once the cheapest cars disappear, they rarely come back, and if this trend continues, “entry-level” might soon mean something very different than it used to.
