New Zealand's new vehicle sales rose 5.2 per cent last year, smack on the target set by the industry at the start of the year.
The 64,019 passenger car sales marked a 3.2 per cent increase over 2010, with light commercials up 11.9 per cent to 20,261.
That came despite massive disruption to Japanese companies caused by the March earthquake and tsunami, with those companies less affected picking up sales.
At the height of the crisis, Toyota predicted its tally could drop as low as 14,000 units, with a $300 million loss of revenue. But canny trading and delaying tactics, such as putting its approved used Signature Class cars on short-term lease, allowed it to all but catch up once power stations and factories returned to operation.
December marked a rise of 26.1 per cent over the same month in 2010, and 728 of those sales were Corollas. That kept Toyota firmly on top, with a 20.7 per cent market share from 17,534 sales, 2.8 per cent below 2010, partly because of a short supply of the Hilux.