Classification standards
Several car classification schemes include a luxury category, such as: * Australia: Since the year 2000, the Federal Government's luxury car tax applies to new vehicles over a certain purchase price, with higher thresholds applying for cars considered as fuel efficient. As of 2019, the thresholds were approximately AU$66,000 (US$,000) for normal cars and AU$76,000 (US$,000) for fuel efficient cars. * Europe: Luxury cars are classified as F-segment vehicles in the Euro Car Segment, European Commission classification scheme. * Italy: The term "auto di lusso" is used for luxury cars. * France: The term "voiture de luxe" is used for luxury cars. * Germany: The term german: Oberklasse (''upper class'') is used for luxury cars. * Russia: The term ( (''"representative class vehicle'', also translated as ''luxury vehicle'') is used for luxury cars. * Rental cars: The Association of Car Rental Industry Systems Standards#Car Classification Code, ACRISS Car Classification Code is a system used by many car rental companies to define equivalent vehicles across brands. This system includes "Luxury" and "Luxury Elite" categories (along with "Premium" and "Premium Elite" categories). The criteria for a vehicle to be considered "luxury" is not published.Characteristics
Features
Luxury cars have traditionally emphasized higher levels of comfort and safety, with manufacturers often introducing new safety technologies and comfort amenities on luxury models before they trickle down to mass-market models. Numerous "Intelligent car, smart car" features were found on luxury cars as early as 2009. Luxury vehicles can be a status symbol for conspicuous consumption. However, since many European luxury car buyers shy away from conspicuous consumption, brands offer buyers the option of removing exterior badges that identify the model name or engine size. The suspension system of most luxury cars is tuned to prioritise ride quality over Automobile handling, handling, however some cars are marketed as "sports luxury" and have greater emphasis on handling characteristics.Layout and powertrain
History
European manufacturers
North American manufacturers
East Asian manufacturers
Global financial crisis
The late-2000s Financial crisis of 2007–2008, global financial crisis was the first time since the Great Depression of the 1930s that the luxury car market suffered considerably, something not seen in previous economic downturns. Many such customers saw their net worth decline following the collapse in Financial crisis of 2007–2010, financial markets and real-estate values. For example, some of the steepest drop-offs came at the high end, including the BMW 7 Series and Rolls-Royce Phantom (2003), Rolls-Royce Phantom, and in 2010 Mercedes-Benz unexpectedly dropped the price of the Mercedes-Benz W212, W212 E-Class. The unusually sharp decline in luxury car sales have led observers to believe that there is a fundamental shift and reshaping of the luxury automotive market, with one industry official suggesting that the marques no longer command the premiums that they used to, and another saying that conspicuous consumption was no longer attractive in poor economic conditions. Additionally, mainstream brands have been able to offer amenities and devices such as leather, wood, and anti-lock brakes, previously found only on luxury cars, as the costs decline. However, luxury vehicle sales did not collapse as much as their non-luxury counterparts. This was aided by growing interest in luxury vehicles from emerging markets such as China and Russia. Sales in the entry-level luxury segment remained strong throughout the GFC, due to prices being lowered to compete with well-equipped non-luxury cars. For example, in Canada, several luxury manufacturers set sales records in August 2009, due mostly to discounted pricing on entry-level luxury vehicles.Brands
Market categories
Premium compact / Subcompact executive
The premium compact class is the category of the smallest luxury cars. It became popular in the mid-2000s, when European manufacturers— such as Audi, Volvo, BMW, and Mercedes-Benz— introduced new entry-level models that were smaller and cheaper than their compact executive car, compact executive models. Examples include the Mercedes-Benz A-Class and Mercedes-Benz CLA-Class, CLA-Class, Audi A3, Volvo S40, BMW 1 Series, and BMW 2 Series, 2 Series. Premium compacts compete with well-equipped mid-size cars, and highly optioned premium compact cars can have pricing and features that overlaps with compact executive cars.Compact executive / compact luxury
A compact executive car or a compact luxury car is a premium car larger than a Luxury car#Premium compact, premium compact and smaller than an executive car. In European classification, compact executive cars are part of the D-segment. In North American terms, close equivalents are "compact premium car", "compact luxury car", "entry-level luxury car" and "near-luxury car".Executive / mid-size luxury
Executive car is a British English, British term for an automobile larger than a large family car. In official use, the term is adopted by Euro NCAP, a European organization founded to test for car safety. It is a passenger car classification defined by the European Commission.Luxury saloon / full-size luxury sedan
The next category of luxury cars is known in Great Britain as a "luxury saloon" or "luxury limousine," and is known in the United States as a full-size luxury sedan, large luxury sedan, or flagship sedan. It is the equivalent of the European F-segment and German :de:Oberklasse, Oberklasse segment. Many of these luxury saloons are the flagship for the marque and include the newest automotive technology. Several models are available in long-wheelbase versions, which provide additional rear legroom and may have a higher level of standard features. Examples of luxury saloons / full-size luxury sedans include the BMW 7 Series,Jaguar XJ, Cadillac CT6 Genesis G90, Audi A8, Mercedes-Benz S-Class, Lexus LS, and Maserati Quattroporte.Ultra-luxury
Luxury cars costing over (as of 2007) can be considered as "ultra-luxury cars". Examples include the Rolls-Royce Phantom VII, Rolls-Royce Phantom, Mercedes-Maybach S600, Maybach S650, Hongqi L5, Bentley Flying Spur (2005), Bentley Flying Spur, Toyota Century and Aurus Senat. High-end sports cars which are targeted towards performance rather than luxury are not usually classified as ultra-luxury cars, even when their cost is greater than . The history of a brand and the exclusivity of a particular model can result in Price premium, price premiums compared to luxury cars with similar features from less prestigious manufacturers. Ultra-luxury cars are usually selected as the official state car.Grand tourer
Luxury SUV/Crossover
Long before the luxury SUV segment became popular in the 1990s, the vehicle in this segment was the 1966 Jeep Wagoneer (SJ)#Super Wagoneer, Jeep Super Wagoneer, which was marketed at the time as a station wagon. It was the first off-road SUV to offer a V8 engine and automatic transmission along with luxury car trim and equipment. Standard features included bucket seating, a center console, air conditioning, a seven-position tilt steering wheel, a vinyl roof, and gold-colored trim panels on the body sides and tailgate. By the late 1970s, optional equipment included an electric sunroof. The 1978 Jeep Wagoneer Limited was the spiritual successor to the Super Wagoneer and was the first four-wheel drive car to use leather upholstery. Another early luxury SUV is the Range Rover Classic, Range Rover. Released in 1970 as a two-door and a four-door version in 1981, the model was pushed upmarket in 1983 by introducing an automatic transmission (Chrysler's A727 TorqueFlite) as an option. The Range Rover had a long-travel coil-spring suspension and an aluminium V8 engine. In the mid-1990s, the SUV market expanded with new entrants. By the mid-1990s, the entry-level Ford Explorer and upscale Jeep Grand Cherokee were the market leaders for SUVs. The fastest-growing sector of this market was for the so-called luxury SUVs, which included the Jeep Grand Cherokee ... the Grand Cherokee's allure: "This vehicle is proof you can have a true off-road vehicle without giving up luxuries and amenities" with the Jeep providing a crucial new intangible factor for buyers—image. The SUV models generated higher profit margins than passenger cars, and car manufacturers began introducing new luxury SUVs during the late 1990s. SUVs such as the 1995 Lexus LX, 1997 Mercedes-Benz M-Class, and 1998 Lincoln Navigator were the first SUVs produced by these luxury car brands. Some of these early luxury SUV models used Vehicle frame#Unibody, unibody construction, becoming part of the trend moving away from the body-on-frame construction traditionally used by off-road vehicles. During the mid-2000s, SUVs from luxury car brands grew at almost 40% in the United States to more than 430,000 vehicles (excluding SUV-only brands like Hummer and Land Rover), at a time when luxury car sales suffered a 1% decline, and non-luxury SUV sales were flat. By 2004, 30% of major luxury brands' U.S. sales were SUVs. Crossover (automobile), Crossover SUVs became increasingly popular in the mid-2000s, and manufacturers also began to produce luxury versions of crossovers. The Lexus RX was the earliest luxury crossover on the market, and it has since been the best-selling luxury vehicle in the US. Some luxury crossovers are built on a car platform, platform shared with sedans or hatchbacks. For example, the Infiniti FX is based upon the same platform as the Infiniti_G-series_(Q40/Q60)#Third_generation_(V35,_2002–2007), Infiniti G35 sedans and coupes. While early luxury crossovers released in the late 1990s have resembled traditional boxy SUVs, later crossovers, such as the Infiniti FX and BMW X6, have been designed with a sporting appearance. Despite the increased popularity of crossover models, luxury versions of traditional SUVs remain in production, often being badge engineering, badge-engineered versions of their non-luxury SUVs. Examples include the Lexus LX, Infiniti QX80, and Lincoln Navigator, which are the premium versions of the Toyota Land Cruiser, Nissan Patrol, and Ford Expedition respectively. Research data from the mid-2000s suggested that luxury SUV buyers did not consider traditional luxury cars (e.g. sedans and coupes), therefore the SUV is becoming the key to bringing new customers to the luxury dealerships. Luxury car companies have increasingly introduced SUV or crossover models in the 2010s. For example, Rolls-Royce Cullinan, Bentley Bentayga, Aston Martin DBX, Maserati Levante, and Lamborghini Urus.See also
* Car classification * Luxury goodsReferences
{{DEFAULTSORT:Luxury Vehicle Luxury vehicles, Car classifications