- A US research firm has found that yellow cars keep their value more than others
- A study of two-million vehicles found that yellow cars depreciate by 27 per cent
- The worst performing cars are gold ones, which lose 40 per cent of their value
- According to the firm, buying less common colours drives up their demand
Yellow cars keep their value more than any other colour, a study of two-million vehicles has found.
While the average car depreciates by 33 per cent in the first three years of ownership, yellow ones depreciate by only 27 per cent.
The worst performing are gold vehicles, which lose 40 per cent of their value.
Yellow cars keep their value more than any other colour, a study of two-million vehicles has found
A yellow car depreciates by only 27 per cent in the first three years of ownership. Gold cars are the worst performing of all the colours, losing 40 per cent of their value
‘Yellow cars are relatively less common, which could drive up demand and help maintain their value,’ said a spokesman for the US research company that carried out the year-long survey.
The results showed that orange cars depreciate by 30.6 per cent, green by 30.9 per cent, white by 32.6 per cent, red by 32.7 per cent, and blue by 33.5 per cent.