---
title: "IV. Car Personality"
description: "Just as positive feelings about driving have cooled a bit since 1991, so too has the special relationship that drivers have with their cars. The number of drivers who say they think of their car as &#8220;something special &#8212; more than just a way to get around&#8221; has fallen by nearly half, to 23% now [&hellip;]"
date: "2006-08-01"
authors:
  - name: "Pew Research Center"
url: "https://www.pewresearch.org/social-trends/2006/08/01/iv-car-personality/"
---

# IV. Car Personality

![Figure](https://www.pewresearch.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/legacy/159-interior.gif)

Just as positive feelings about driving have cooled a bit since 1991, so too has the special relationship that drivers have with their cars. The number of drivers who say they think of their car as "something special -- more than just a way to get around" has fallen by nearly half, to 23% now from 43% in the 1991 Gallup survey.

This drop-off occurred about equally among all major sociodemographic groups of drivers -- including men and women, older and younger, more and less affluent -- and in all regions of the country.

At the same time, however, about three-in-ten (31%) drivers report they at least sometimes think of their car as having a personality of its own.

![Figure](https://www.pewresearch.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/legacy/160-interior.gif)

There are virtually no differences between men and women on this question, but there are some variances by age. Some 41% of 18-to-29 year olds say their car has a personality, while just 25% of those ages 65 and older agree.

Also, just under three-in-ten (28%) drivers say they can usually tell what a person is like from the kind of car he or she drives, a figure that is on par with drivers' assessments in the 1991 survey. Of course, cars aren't the only inanimate window into the personality of humans. When asked to assess whether a person's car, home or clothing tells the most about what that person is like, respondents ranked the car a distant third -- at just 7%. Home was the big winner, with 54% saying it revealed the most about its owner, while 24% said that about clothing.