Are vehicles with location-based names popular in those places?
The analysts at Edmunds.com set out explore an interesting question. Since there are a variety of vehicles named after geographical locations – examples being the Toyota Tacoma, Hyundai Tucson, Chevrolet Colorado, etc. – are any of these vehicles actually popular in the areas they’re named after?
Picking through Polk’s registration data – the answer to that is pretty clear: No, the vehicles are not particularly popular in the areas they’re named after. So, if they were, what should they be named?
Check out the following analysis from Edmunds:
Vehicle name: Buick LaCrosse
New name: Buick Kincaid
Only 0.2 percent of new cars purchased this year in La Crosse, Wisc. were a Buick LaCrosse. In fact, 4,752 other cities and towns in the U.S. enjoyed a larger share of LaCrosses. But if you want to find the biggest concentration of Buick LaCrosse sales, follow the Mississippi River about 400 miles south toward Kincaid, Ill., where the sedan made up 8.9 percent of all new-car registrations this year. With an area under one square mile and a population of less than 1,500 people, Kincaid can nevertheless claim the title of the "LaCrosse Capital of the United States."
Vehicle name: Chevrolet Colorado
New name: Chevrolet Montana
You'd expect this versatile truck to be a top choice for Coloradoans to navigate the rugged Rocky Mountain terrain, right? Wrong. Colorado is actually the 34th most popular state for the compact pickup, which makes up just 0.5 percent of the state's new vehicle registrations so far in 2015. So where are you most likely to find the Chevy Colorado? Head two states north to Montana, where the truck has made up two percent of all new vehicle purchases this year. And let's be honest: "Chevy Montana" sounds like the kind of truck you'd want to help you herd livestock through the Great Plains.
Vehicle name: Chevrolet Malibu
New name: Chevrolet Garciasville
As it turns out, there isn't a whole lot of Southern California love for the Chevy Malibu. Only 0.1 percent of new car registrations in its namesake community carried the Malibu nameplate this year, ranking the beachside city as the 10,789th most popular locale for the vehicle. If you want to find the top town, you'll have to travel 1,600 miles away from Malibu to Garciasville, Texas, located just over the Mexican border on the Rio Grande, where more than 15 percent of all new car registrations this year are Chevy Malibus.
Vehicle name: Dodge Durango
New name: Dodge Castle Dale
On the surface, "Durango" is a perfect name for this vehicle. It suggests a certain toughness that you'd want in your SUV. Too bad for Dodge that the folks in Durango, Colo. aren't responding accordingly. Only 0.5 percent of car buyers in this picturesque mountain town opted for the Dodge SUV. But one place where this vehicle is most appreciated is less than one gas tank away in Castle Dale, Utah, where 7.7 percent of all new car purchases this year were Durangos.
Vehicle name: Hyundai Santa Fe
New name: Hyundai Clements
Santa Fe might be the capital of New Mexico, but it's far from being the capital of its eponymous SUV. Only one tenth of one percent of all new car purchases in this city of about 70,000 people were Hyundai Santa Fes year to date. One place where the Santa Fe SUV is truly appreciated, though, is Clements, Md. So far in 2015, 5.6 percent of all new car sales in this unincorporated town in the heart of the Chesapeake region were Santa Fes.
Vehicle name: Hyundai Tucson
New name: Hyundai Wilmington or Hyundai Fort Garland
The folks in Tucson may be able to rally around their Arizona Wildcats, but there's far less enthusiasm for the car that shares the city's name. Only four tenths of one percent of all new cars registered there this year were Hyundai Tucsons. But there is a spirited battle underway to claim this compact SUV: both Wilmington, N.Y. and Fort Garland, Colo. boast the largest share of Tucsons (6.7 percent of all new sales). In one corner you have Wilmington, which is perhaps most famous for hosting the alpine skiing events during the 1980 Winter Olympics. In the other corner, there's Fort Garland, where the average snowfall is 47 inches per year. Maybe these towns should settle this Tucson battle with a good old-fashioned snowball fight!
Vehicle name: Kia Sedona
New name: Kia Cedar Grove
Where's the "Sedona Spirit" in Sedona, Ariz.?! Not a single new Kia Sedona has been registered in its namesake town this year. Maybe Kia should start market research into the "Kia Cedar Grove." After all, nearly 13 percent of all new car purchases registered in this sleepy West Virginia town were Kia Sedonas. Perhaps the vehicle is more suited to navigate the Appalachian Mountains than the dusty desert terrain?
Vehicle name: Toyota Tacoma
New name: Toyota Kilauea
Almost two percent of vehicles registered this year in Tacoma, WA were Toyota Tacomas, which is relatively impressive, except when you consider that 5,492 other U.S. cities and towns have a better showing. Unfortunately, it's impossible to drive a Tacoma from Washington state to the place where the compact truck is most popular. That's because the town with the highest rate of Toyota Tacoma purchases this year is 2,600 miles of ocean away in Kilauea, Hawaii. Believe it or not, more than one out of every four new cars registered this year in this Hawaiian paradise (26.5 percent, to be exact) is a Toyota Tacoma. That sort of brand loyalty is enough to make any Toyota executive say "Aloha!"