I wonder what the American market looks like?
Before I give you the direct answer, let's look at some other stuff first. First the global truck market broken up by the biggest companies in the world by truck sales. Stats are from 2022 in this graph below and sadly they don't give numbers. PACCAR leads followed by Daimler then Volvo Group.

This next graph shows the predicted growth of medium and heavy duty commercial vehicles by growth rate. Overall, these companies seem to predict good growth for much of the world. Greenland of course is always no data or unknown.


Not to get into the truck sales for the USA. In the USA, as with Europe, there are class trucks. The trucks we drive in ATS are mostly all Class 8 trucks which appear on this graph as yellow.

Next we have a pie graph showing us data from 2014. Back in 2014, Daimler NA lead in sales (being lead by their Freightliner brand) followed by PACCAR, Volvo, then Navistar (International).

But the latest 2022 data shows a new story... kind of. The companies are shown in a different way ny separating them by brand. We see Freightliner dominates with 37.9% of the sales. This mostly comes from fleet sales. This graph splits PACCAR between Kenworth and Peterbilt. The less expensive Peterbilt's sell slightly more than Kenworth. If the two brands are combined, they make up 29.7% of the market. International is the next followed by the two Volvo brands of Volvo Trucks and Mack. Western Star makes a distant last place.
The US truck sales have one dominate player, somewhat skewed by all their sales to fleets. Second place is a battle among roughly four different companies, though realistically more like three. This setup has not really changed with Kenworth and Peterbilt always in second or third for the past twenty years. International has gained market share, but not enough to take third. Volvo Trucks has lost some market share to International.
