North Carolina's Congressional District 9 Facts
Autos Drive North Carolina Forward
- 
				- All
- Industry Impact
- Tax Revenue
- Registrations
- New Purchases
- Activity at Ports
- Fueling
- Consumers
- Automaker Facilities
 
- 
					- Alabama
- Alaska
- Arizona
- Arkansas
- California
- Colorado
- Connecticut
- Delaware
- District of Columbia
- Florida
- Georgia
- Hawaii
- Idaho
- Illinois
- Indiana
- Iowa
- Kansas
- Kentucky
- Louisiana
- Maine
- Maryland
- Massachusetts
- Michigan
- Minnesota
- Mississippi
- Missouri
- Montana
- Nebraska
- Nevada
- New Hampshire
- New Jersey
- New Mexico
- New York
- North Carolina
- North Dakota
- Ohio
- Oklahoma
- Oregon
- Pennsylvania
- Rhode Island
- South Carolina
- South Dakota
- Tennessee
- Texas
- Utah
- Vermont
- Virginia
- Washington
- West Virginia
- Wisconsin
- Wyoming
 
Filter Selections:
Economic Insights
See Auto Industry Impacts at the National, State, and Congressional District levels.
		
	Industry Impact
14K
																						14 Thousand total auto jobs in North Carolina
													2.72%
																						2.72% depend on the auto industry for jobs
													$863.29M
																						Total Labor Income Annually
													27.9K
																						Total New Cars Sold in 2024
													Industry Impact and Tax Revenue: Multi-industry contribution analysis of the economic impact of automotive manufacturing, selling, repairing, renting, and additional maintenance modeled using IMPLAN economic analysis data software, 2023 data year; compiled by Alliance for Automotive Innovation with data provided by S&P Global Mobility, sales figures represent new vehicle registrations between January 1, 2024 - December 31, 2024. New vehicle sales revenue derived from NADA Data.
			
		Tax Revenue
$108.05M
						
													in state tax revenue
						
					$2.59M
						
													corporate profits tax
						
					$46.08M
						
													federal income taxes
						
					Registrations
714.7K
					Registered
				By Body Style
- Cars 254,792 (35.60%)
- UVs 251,721 (35.20%)
- Pickups 162,882 (22.80%)
- Vans/Minivans 34,203 (4.80%)
By Powertrain
- ICE / Hybrid 709,325 (99.20%)
- Electric 3,998 (0.60%)
- Plug-In Hybrid 1,399 (0.20%)
The North Carolina congressional district 9 average age of vehicles is 13.3 years; The national average is 12.2.
		
					Registration figures compiled by Alliance for Automotive Innovation with data provided by S&P Global Mobility as of December 31, 2024; new purchase figures compiled by Alliance for Automotive Innovation with data provided by S&P Global Mobility representing new vehicle registrations between January 1, 2024 - December 31, 2024.
		
	New Purchases
27.9K
					Vehicles Sold
				By Body Style
- Cars 5,920 (21.20%)
- UVs 15,517 (55.70%)
- Pickups 5,443 (19.50%)
- Vans/Minivans 1,000 (3.60%)
By Powertrain
- ICE / Hybrid 26,434 (94.80%)
- Electric 1,208 (4.30%)
- Plug-In Hybrid 240 (0.90%)
Fueling
- Gasoline Stations 441
- EV Level 2 Charging Ports 148
- EV Level 2 Charging Stations 63
- EV DC Fast Charging Ports 93
- EV DC Fast Charging Stations 23
Compiled by Alliance for Automotive Innovation with data provided by U.S. Department of Energy’s Alternative Fuels Data Center, figures represent fueling data as of January 1, 2025.
		
	Consumers
		
		$64.3K
																						Median Household Income
													66.00%
																						Owner Occupied Housing
													34.00%
																						Rental Occupied Housing
													81.30%
																						Owner Occupied Single Family Homes
													Commuting to Work
- Drive Alone to Work (77.30%)
- Carpool to Work (8.70%)
- Work From Home (9.04%)
- Other (4.80%)
Housing Type
- Single Family Home (67.60%)
- 1-Unit (3.00%)
- 2-4 Units (5.50%)
- 5-9 Units (4.20%)
- 10-19 Units (3.60%)
- 20+ Units (2.80%)
- Mobile / RV / Boat (13.30%)
Figures compiled by Alliance for Automotive Innovation with data provided U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey 2023.