The most stolen cars in each Victorian Local Government Area: MAPPED

4 hours ago 33

Of the most stolen cars in each Victorian LGA, Holden Commodore tops the most areas, with Toyota models ranking high in others.


Max Stevens

New data shows the most stolen cars in each Victorian LGA. Holden Commodore tops the most areas, with Toyota models ranking high in others.

 MAPPED
Holden Commodore

Of the 79 LGAs in Victoria, the Holden Commodore was the most stolen vehicle in 26 of them. The Corolla and HiLux were each the most stolen in nine other LGAs, and the Toyota LandCruiser in seven.

Other most stolen vehicles in a smaller number of LGAs included the Ford Falcon and Toyota RAV4.

Top three stolen cars in Victorian LGAs in 2025 (first nine months)

The most common vehicles on Victorian roads by registration count are the Toyota Corolla (167,413), Toyota HiLux (163,497), Ford Ranger (146,858), Toyota Camry (120,020), and Holden Commodore (107,051).

The most stolen vehicles in Victoria in the first nine months of 2025 were the Holden Commodore (1035), Toyota Corolla (829), Toyota HiLux (775), Toyota LandCruiser (693), and Toyota RAV4 (541), latest data from Victoria’s Crime Statistics Agency (CSA) shows.

Some vehicles were stolen at disproportionately higher rates than similar vehicles in 2025. There are 11 per cent more HiLuxs on Victoria’s roads than Ford Rangers, however 326 per cent more HiLuxs were stolen than Rangers in the first nine months of 2025.

This equates to approximately 1 in every 211 HiLuxs compared to 1 in every 807 Rangers stolen in the first 9 months of 2025.

Top three stolen cars in Melbourne LGAs in 2025 (first nine months)

Toyota recently announced that it has introduced additional security measures in some new vehicles aimed at thwarting thieves from stealing Toyota vehicles.

Other common vehicles on Victoria's roads have even lower ratios. There are 100,056 Mazda 3s registered in Victoria, and 73 thefts of the vehicle were recorded in the first 9 months of 2025, equating to 1 in every 1371 Mazda 3s being stolen.

However, registration data does not provide a complete representation of the vehicles in Victoria at any given time, as cars from any state may be outside their state of origin. 

 MAPPED
Toyota HiLux

Additionally, the Victorian Government and Department of Transport and Planning (DTP) state that the data may have errors and state in regards to the data that: “No claim is made as to the accuracy or currency of the content on this site at any time”.

A full list of the top 50 registered vehicles in Victoria and top 50 stolen vehicles in Victoria is included at the bottom of this article. 

The stolen vehicle data in this article is reflective of the data provided to Drive by Victoria's Crime Statistics Agency. This data is collected by Victoria Police.

However, Drive has identified some inconsistencies in the stolen vehicle data collected by Victoria Police, such as incorrectly named vehicles. These incorrect vehicles include multiple instances of a 'Toyota Lantra' and a 'Mazda Elite' being stolen. Neither Toyota nor Mazda has ever sold a car under these names in Australia. Drive has contacted Victoria Police for clarification regarding these inconsistencies.

Top 50 registered vehicles in Victoria

Vehicle Make and ModelTotal Registered in Victoria
Toyota Corolla167413
Toyota HiLux163497
Ford Ranger146858
Toyota Camry120020
Holden Commodore107051
Mazda 3100056
Ford Falcon95851
Hyundai i3093284
Toyota RAV490229
Mitsubishi Triton72738
Toyota LandCruiser64519
Volkswagen Golf63111
Toyota Kluger62558
Toyota LandCruiser Prado61846
Nissan Navara61330
Nissan X-Trail61086
Toyota Yaris59862
Mazda CX-559851
Subaru Forester54933
Toyota HiAce54124
Hyundai Tucson51663
Mitsubishi Outlander50583
Honda Civic49935
Kia Cerato45904
Honda CR-V44151
Ford Territory42478
Kia Sportage40067
Mitsubishi ASX38212
Subaru Outback37390
Ford Focus37383
Volkswagen Tiguan36958
Isuzu D-MAX35790
Mitsubishi Lancer35255
Nissan Patrol35255
Holden Colorado33930
Holden Cruze33287
Mazda CX-333264
Mazda BT-5031571
Suzuki Swift30922
Mazda 230524
Ford Everest29341
Mitsubishi Pajero29113
Subaru Impreza28322
Honda Jazz28182
Hyundai Kona25942
Nissan Qashqai25119
Honda Accord24958
Holden Astra24563
Kia Rio23782
Subaru XV22893
Hyundai Accent22583

Top 100 stolen cars in Victoria in 2025 (first nine months)

Make Model2025
Holden Commodore1,035
Toyota Corolla829
Toyota HiLux775
Toyota LandCruiser693
Toyota RAV4541
Toyota Camry420
Nissan Navara381
Toyota Prado356
Ford Falcon322
Nissan Patrol246
Volkswagen Golf226
Toyota HiAce209
Subaru Impreza204
Toyota Kluger194
Toyota Lantra183
Ford Ranger182
Subaru Forester175
Mitsubishi Triton169
Nissan Pulsar160
Honda Civic147
Toyota Yaris143
Isuzu Isuzu131
Hyundai i30120
Subaru Outback119
Nissan X-Trail119
Ford Territory119
Holden Cruze108
Holden Calais102
Toyota 86100
Jeep Cherokee97
Ford Focus94
Mitsubishi Lancer93
Mitsubishi Outlander87
Kia Sportage84
Subaru Liberty83
Honda C-RV83
Ford Courier81
Mazda 373
Kia Cerato64
Holden Rodeo62
Mazda CX-561
Mazda Bravo61
Holden Astra61
BMW X561
Hyundai Accent56
Volkswagen Tiguan55
Subaru WRX55
Kia Rio55
Mitsubishi Express54
Land Rover Discovery54
Suzuki Swift53
Honda Jazz49
Volkswagen Polo44
Nissan Qashqai44
Mazda BT-5043
Ford Everest43
BMW X343
Volkswagen Passat42
Holden Captiva42
Mazda CX-941
Isuzu D-Max41
Mazda CX-340
Nissan Pathfinder39
Mitsubishi Pajero39
Hyundai Tucson38
Nissan Skyline37
Holden Barina37
Honda H-RV36
Holden Colorado36
Ford Mustang36
Toyota Echo35
Kia Sorento35
Honda Accord35
Ford Fiesta35
Audi Q535
Toyota Toyota C-HR33
Ford Mondeo33
Audi A433
Kia Carnival32
Ford Transit31
Subaru XV30
Hyundai Santa Fe29
Mercedes-Benz Sprinter28
Mercedes-Benz C25028
Mitsubishi ASX27
Mazda Elite27
Ford Econovan27
Holden Statesman26
Audi Q326
Volkswagen Amarok25
Mitsubishi Canter25
Hyundai Kona25
Honda Odyssey25
Ford Laser25
Audi Q725
Hyundai Elantra24
Toyota Aurion23
Audi A323
Jeep Wrangler22
Toyota Commuter22
Max Stevens

Max is the News Publishing Coordinator for Drive. He enjoys creating engaging digital content, including videos, podcasts, interactive maps, and graphs. Prior to Drive, he studied at Monash University and gained experience working for various publications. He grew up playing Burnout 3: Takedown on the PS2 and was disappointed when real life car races didn’t have the same physics.

Read more about Max StevensLinkIcon

Read Entire Article
| | | |