Lexus is wrapping up one of the strongest years in its U.S. history, driven almost entirely by surging demand for SUVs and crossovers. The luxury brand expects U.S. deliveries to climb about 5 percent in 2025, crossing the 360,000-vehicle mark. That growth puts Lexus firmly among the top-performing luxury nameplates in the country.
What stands out is not just the volume, but where it’s coming from. SUVs and crossovers now make up more than 80 percent of Lexus sales, a clear signal that the brand’s pivot away from sedans is paying off.
SUVs Are Selling Faster Than Lexus Can Build Them
The RX midsize SUV continues to anchor Lexus’ lineup, but newer and refreshed models are fueling the current momentum. The GX, in particular, has become one of the hottest vehicles in the luxury SUV space. By late December, nationwide inventory for the GX had dropped to less than three days’ supply.
For buyers, that has translated into long wait times and fewer deals. Dealers say demand is so strong that many customers are paying full sticker price and, in some cases, searching across state lines just to find available stock.
Production Limits Remain the Biggest Hurdle
Strong demand has exposed a familiar challenge: supply. Many Lexus models are imported from Japan, making them vulnerable to tariffs and logistical constraints. While Toyota’s global manufacturing network is running close to maximum capacity, scaling up production quickly is not easy.
The company is prioritizing output of key models, including the updated GX and the TX, a three-row SUV built in the United States. The TX has emerged as a breakout success, pulling in new customers who may not have previously considered the brand.
A Strategic Shift That’s Paying Off
Lexus’ current success follows a broader product reset. After years of flat sales and an aging lineup, the brand deliberately trimmed its sedan portfolio and doubled down on SUVs that better match U.S. consumer preferences.
Hybrids have also become a major growth driver. Nearly half of Toyota and Lexus vehicles sold in the U.S. now feature hybrid powertrains, even as demand for fully electric vehicles has cooled. For Lexus, hybrids offer a sweet spot: efficiency gains without the charging concerns that still hold some buyers back.
Competition Is Catching Up
Despite the strong numbers, challenges remain. Luxury features are increasingly common in mass-market vehicles, narrowing the perceived gap between premium and non-luxury brands. At the same time, production constraints could limit how much Lexus can grow in the near term.
There’s also a longer-term question around brand positioning, as Toyota prepares to expand the ultra-luxury Century nameplate. How that influences Lexus’ place at the top end of the market remains to be seen.
A New Baseline, Not a Peak
Lexus executives say they don’t view current sales levels as a one-off high point. Instead, they see them as a new baseline, assuming broader economic conditions stay supportive. If supply can eventually catch up with demand, Lexus’ SUV-led strategy looks well positioned to keep the brand at the front of the U.S. luxury market.




