Toyota Production Falls on Car Safety Scandals, US Recalls

Global Output in August Fell 12.6% Year Over Year
Toyota logo
(Al Drago/Bloomberg News)

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Toyota Motor Corp.’s sales fell again after declines in Japan and China put an end to a short-lived recovery, while production was disrupted by domestic scandals and recalls abroad.

Global output, including that of subsidiaries Daihatsu Motor Co. and Hino Motors Ltd., dropped in August by 12.6% from a year earlier to 808,023 units, the company said Sept. 27. Global sales fell 3.7% year-on-year following a 0.7% gain in July.

Toyota’s sales fell more than 9% in Japan as it felt the delayed impact of recent regulatory scandals involving falsified vehicle safety certifications, which forced a number of the country’s biggest carmakers to suspend production for affected models.



Its hybrid gas-electric cars saw renewed popularity as demand for electric vehicles plateaued, but a global slump in new car sales and intense competition in China are weighing on the world’s biggest carmaker.

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While certain models like its Granvia minivan are proving popular in China, Toyota’s sales in the country fell 13.5% to 152,065 units in August with an ongoing price war with the likes of BYD Co. threatening to further squeeze its market share.

A downturn in EV demand has led some of the world’s biggest automakers to scale back electrification goals. Last month, a Nikkei report said Toyota had slashed its 2026 annual sales goal from 1.5 million battery EVs, to 1 million.

Toyota sold 12,682 battery EVs in August, all but 119 of which were sold outside of Japan. Meanwhile, it sold 336,848 hybrids that month, a 22% increase from last year.

EV uptake has been slower in the island nation than in other major markets due to the dominance of hybrids and gas-powered cars.

Earlier this week, Toyota expanded the size of its share buyback to 1.2 trillion yen ($8.3 billion), adding 200 billion yen to a stock-repurchase plan announced in May.

The carmaker’s operating profit for the quarter that ended in June was 1.31 trillion yen, 17% higher than a year earlier. Its hybrid variants are doing well in North America and the weak yen is helping it rake in revenue from abroad.

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Honda Motor Co. saw global output fall 11.3% from a year earlier to 307,870 units in August. Its production fell more than 29% in China, where it recently cut jobs and suspended production at three plants. The Japanese carmaker said in July it was cutting gasoline-car manufacturing by 19% as it looks to hasten its shift toward electric vehicles.

Honda’s global sales dipped 4.7% to 309,477 units.

Nissan Motor Co.’s production fell 15.5% year-on-year to 236,016 units last month, while sales declined by 5.5% to 244,279. On Sept. 26, it announced plans to buy back 79.9 billion yen ($551 million) worth of its shares from French carmaker Renault SA as the two look to rebalance their business partnership.