Honda Accord Hits 15 Million Sales in America as Two Sisters Make History
Honda has reached a milestone that few nameplates will ever touch, celebrating the sale of the 15 millionth Accord in America. The landmark car, a 2026 Honda Accord Sport-L Hybrid, was purchased at Norm Reeves Honda in Cerritos, California, by Andrea, a 26-year-old insurance agent from Southern California. In a fitting nod to the Accord’s long-running family appeal, her new hybrid sedan replaces a 2017 Accord Sport that had been passed down from her father, whose first new vehicle purchase back in 1997 was also an Accord.
The story gets even better. On the same day, Andrea’s younger sister, Alondra, purchased her own 2026 Accord Sport-L Hybrid from the same dealership, becoming the owner of the 15,000,001st Accord sold in America. That kind of timing feels almost scripted, but it also says a lot about why the Accord has stayed relevant for nearly five decades. It has long been the sensible choice that never felt like a compromise, blending reliability, efficiency, safety, and just enough driving personality to keep owners coming back.
For Honda, the 15 million sales mark lands as the Accord celebrates its 50th anniversary and continues to hold its place as America’s best-selling car over the past half-century. More than 13 million Accords have been built in the United States, with production centered at Honda’s Marysville Auto Plant in Ohio since 1982. The Accord was also the first Honda model, and the first vehicle from a Japanese automaker, to be manufactured in America, making this milestone just as much about Honda’s U.S. manufacturing legacy as it is about sedan sales.
The refreshed 2026 Honda Accord arrives with a familiar mix of practicality and polish, offered in LX, SE, Sport Hybrid, EX-L Hybrid, Sport-L Hybrid, and Touring Hybrid trims. New standard tech includes a larger touchscreen, wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto compatibility, and a wireless phone charger, while every Accord continues to include Honda Sensing safety and driver-assistive technology. With hybrids now accounting for more than half of Accord sales over the past three years, the nameplate is clearly evolving with buyers while holding onto the trust that made families like Andrea and Alondra’s choose it generation after generation.
