The list of 2025's most and least stolen new cars is out. Is yours on the list?
The New Cars Thieves Can’t Stop Stealing (And the Ones They Won’t Touch)
For a car thief, stealing someone’s vehicle means a potentially juicy payout. For the person whose car is being stolen, it means you’re suddenly faced with a major inconvenience and can look forward to hours of painful communication with an insurance company — not to mention the loss of anything that was in the car at the time of the theft.
When you’re shopping for a new vehicle, the frequency with which it gets stolen should be something you research before seriously considering any model. The Highway Loss Data Institute recently shared data highlighting the most and least frequently stolen new cars, with theft rates based on insurance claim data for car models released from 2022 to 2024. Here’s a look at those rankings and what the data tells us about how thieves select vehicles to steal.
What Do Car Thieves Target?

Modern vehicles are outfitted with all kinds of anti-theft technology. Unfortunately, thieves know this, and they do everything they can to exploit these countermeasures. The Camaro ZL1, which tops the list of most stolen new vehicles, is a target for a few reasons: its potential payoff, its beefy horsepower, and the fact that thieves have discovered a technical glitch that allows them to clone the car’s key fobs much more easily than other models.
“We expect powerful and high-value vehicles to be targeted, and these models check both those boxes,” said Matt Moore, chief insurance operations officer at HLDI and the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.
2025’s Most Stolen Cars
- Chevrolet Camaro ZL1
- Acura TLX 4WD
- Chevrolet Camaro
- GMC Sierra 2500 crew cab 4WD
- Acura TLX 2WD
- GMC Sierra 3500 crew cab 4WD
- Chevrolet Silverado 3500 crew cab 4WD
- Dodge Durango 4WD
- Land Rover Range Rover 4WD
- Ram 1500 crew cab short-wheelbase 4WD
2025’s Least Stolen Cars
- Tesla Model 3 4WD
- Tesla Model Y 4WD
- Tesla Model 3 2WD
- Toyota RAV4 Prime 4WD
- Tesla Model S 4WD
- Volvo XC90 4WD
- Volvo XC40 4WD
- Ford Mustang Mach-E
- Volkswagen ID.4
- Subaru Crosstrek 4WD with EyeSight (2024)
A series of electric cars topped the list of least stolen vehicles, which makes sense. Because electric vehicles need to be charged, they’re more frequently stored in garages, making them much harder and more inconvenient for thieves to target. Ultimately, convenience is one of the main motivating factors for car thieves, making inconvenience one of the more powerful deterrents.
How To Protect Your Vehicle
If you want to protect your car from thieves, here are some of the most tried-and-true methods.
Automatic Immobilizers
Many thieves will try to hot-wire or physically brute-force your vehicle’s ignition to get the car to start without a key. Immobilizers keep your car from moving even if a thief manages to get it started.
Audible Alarms
Car thieves work in darkness for a reason: the less attention they attract, the better. A loud, annoying alarm will make it impossible for them to work stealthily, drawing a crowd to your vehicle the longer it goes on.
Steering Wheel Locks
Want to deter a thief before they even get inside your vehicle? Put a lock on your steering wheel. A thief will take one look at the bulky device locked to your wheel and turn around. Steering wheel locks make it impossible to fully turn the steering wheel to steer a car, so even if a thief does manage to start your car, they won’t get far.
Vehicle Recovery Systems
If all else fails and thieves do manage to steal your car, having some sort of tracking system onboard can be the difference between a successful theft and the police being able to recover your property. Often, your dealership will be able to install some sort of vehicle recovery device. Otherwise, your solution could be as simple as slipping an AirTag behind the backseat.
Sources:
- Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) “HLDI Insurance Report: Whole vehicle theft losses” (2025)
- NHTSA, “Vehicle Theft Prevention” (2025)
Related
- Do You Know What That Little Button on Your Seat Belt Is For?
- What Those Lines on Your Backup Camera Really Tell You
- Here’s What The Small Panel On Your Car’s Front Bumper Is For