Consumer ActivityCoincident

Retail Sales ex Auto

Retail Sales ex Auto is the headline Retail Sales figure with motor vehicle and parts dealers removed (NAICS 441). It gives a smoother, more representative view of underlying consumer spending habits by stripping out one of the most vola…

Provider
U.S. Census Bureau
Survey
Advance Monthly Retail Trade Survey (MARTS)
Frequency
Monthly
Retail ex-autos, year-over-year
6.3% +0.7%vs prior
Apr 2026 · Monthly
Census · FRED
201620182020202220242026

At A Glance#

FieldDetail
ProviderU.S. Census Bureau
Survey / ToolAdvance Monthly Retail Trade Survey (MARTS)
FrequencyMonthly
Indicator TypeCoincident
Main UseRetail Sales with motor vehicles removed — reveals the underlying consumer spending trend without auto volatility
Timeframe TrackedShort to Medium-Term (1–6 months)
Sourcehttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/RSFSXMV

What It Is#

Retail Sales ex Auto is the headline Retail Sales figure with motor vehicle and parts dealers removed (NAICS 441). It gives a smoother, more representative view of underlying consumer spending habits by stripping out one of the most volatile month-to-month categories.

Who Provides It#

The U.S. Census Bureau, published as part of the same Advance Monthly Retail Trade Survey (MARTS) report as headline Retail Sales.

How It Is Collected#

Identical to Retail Sales — Census collects data from the same ~4,800 employer firms via internet or telephone. There is no separate survey for this series.

How It Is Computed#

Calculated by removing motor vehicle and parts dealers (NAICS 441) from total retail and food services sales. NAICS 441 includes:

  • Automobile dealers
  • Other motor vehicle dealers
  • Automotive parts, accessories, and tire stores

Why autos are stripped out: Auto sales are highly volatile month-to-month due to:

  • Interest rates and financing costs
  • Vehicle supply conditions (inventory, chip shortages, etc.)
  • Dealer incentives and promotional periods
  • The large-ticket, infrequent nature of auto purchases

Removing them reveals the steadier trend in everyday consumer goods and services spending.

Indicator Type#

Coincident. Like headline Retail Sales, this still measures sales already completed during the reference month. However, because it removes the most volatile category, analysts often consider it a more reliable coincident signal for underlying consumer momentum.

Why It Matters#

Analysts and the Fed frequently reference Retail Sales ex Auto alongside the headline figure to distinguish genuine shifts in consumer spending from auto-driven noise. A divergence between the two — for example, headline Retail Sales falling while ex-auto rises — typically indicates that autos are the driver rather than broad consumer weakness.

  • Retail Sales — the parent headline measure including auto sales
  • Personal Spending — the broadest measure of consumer spending, including services

Sources#

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