The Manual Transmission Is Almost Dead, With Market Share Dropping Well Below 1%

Only 27 manual-equipped models remain for 2025, dropping to 24 in 2026 as Mercedes, VW, and Mini phase out three-pedal options entirely

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Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Manual transmissions collapsed from 35% of U.S. sales in 1980 to below 1% today.
  • Faster automatics, EVs, and driver-assist systems made manual transmissions technically obsolete.
  • Only 27 manual models survive for 2025, nearly all performance-focused enthusiast vehicles.

Thirty-five percent of new American cars rolled off the lot with a stick shift in 1980. Today that number sits below 1%, according to EPA Automotive Trends data, and it’s not coming back. Only 27 models offered a manual for 2025. By the 2026 model year, that drops to 24. Volkswagen kills the Jetta GLI manual after 2026. Mini stopped making manuals entirely in 2024. This isn’t a slow fade. It’s a countdown.

The Decline Wasn’t Gradual – It Was a Cliff

A brief 2023 uptick gave enthusiasts hope, but analysts called it exactly what it was.

The trajectory looks like a ski slope:

  • ~35% market share in 1980
  • 9% by 2006
  • 1.7% in 2023
  • a projected 0.9% for 2026, per independent analyses of market data

That 2023 bump — reported by J.D. Power — briefly fueled “Save the Manuals” hashtags and vinyl-record comparisons. Except vinyl actually staged a real comeback. Manuals got a blip. Analysts cited by Reviews.com called it “false hope,” and subsequent EPA figures confirmed the slide resumed. Mercedes-Benz and Volkswagen have both confirmed full manual eliminations ahead, with the Golf GTI, Golf R, and Jetta GLI all discontinued or scheduled to end. Honda killed the manual Accord after 2021 — only the Civic Si and Type R survive. Manual-equipped models fell 57% in a decade, per Carscoops; at this pace, effective extinction arrives around 2037.

Technology Ended This Argument Years Ago

Modern automatics don’t just match manuals — they embarrass them.

Eight- and ten-speed automatics shift faster than any human foot-and-hand combination. EVs use single-speed reduction gearboxes — there are literally no gears to shift, making gas vs diesel comparisons increasingly relevant for buyers weighing alternatives. Driver-assist systems need software-controlled transmissions; a clutch pedal complicates everything from adaptive cruise to lane-keeping. The machine simply got better at the machine’s job.

“Out of our cold, dead hands” would Ford abandon a manual Mustang. — Ford CEO Jim Farley

Then there’s the skills gap sealing it shut. Only about 39% of Gen Z Americans can drive stick, versus roughly 83% of boomers. Automakers see those numbers and do straightforward math: low demand plus high engineering cost equals discontinued variant. The Alvaro Puig types — teaching their kids on BMWs, putting it in college essays — are the exception, not the market.

The Last 27 Aren’t Commuter Cars

What remains tells you everything about what manuals have actually become.

The survivors — Mazda MX-5 Miata, BMW M2, Honda Civic Type R, Cadillac Blackwings, Toyota GR Corolla — are enthusiast objects. Think hand-ground pour-over coffee in a Keurig world: beautiful, intentional, and absolutely not what most people are buying.

Mercedes-Benz R&D chief Marcus Schaeffer confirmed the brand will “eliminate manual transmissions” as part of streamlining its powertrain portfolio, according to The Drive.

If you’re still hunting for three pedals, the window is narrowing fast. The surviving 27 models are almost entirely performance-focused — built for buyers who treat driving as the point, not the commute. When the number hits zero, and the pace suggests it will, what you’ll have lost isn’t just a gearbox. You’ll have watched a skill finish its long, quiet transformation into a hobby — much like the Legendary Cars that once defined driving culture. That’s not tragedy. That’s just where things ended up.

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