F&I Still Revved Up in Q2
StoneEagle data show growth and products’ outsize role in profit protection.

Most auto dealer F&I metrics rose in the second quarter, according to StoneEagle data.
StoneEagle
Finance-and-insurance product sales are helping shore up auto dealership revenues as consumer affordability and trade tariff challenges threaten front-end profits.
Though average front-end dealer gross profit in June totaled $695 per vehicle, down 26% since January and 40% from the 2024 peak, F&I results headed in the opposite direction, industry provider StoneEagle reported.
The front-end picture, though faded, was still up sharply from prepandemic levels, the company pointed out – by 72%.
Meanwhile, dealers’ average F&I profit per vehicle rose by about 5% quarter-over-quarter and 8% year-over-year to $1,924. Products per deal inched up from 1.54 in the first quarter to 1.57 – the average a year earlier was 1.52.
Average monthly F&I revenue also increased, up 8% both quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year to $220,640, StoneEagle calculated.
Consequently, gross profit per vehicle in June averaged $2,625, up 10% year-to-date and eclipsing prepandemic levels by 59%.
Though F&I revenue has receded somewhat from a robust March, when many consumers descended on dealers to beat anticipated vehicle price inflation resulting from U.S. trade tariffs, F&I remains a humming profit engine for dealers, StoneEagle said.
“It’s a testament to the resilience of F&I and its ability to steady the business when other parts of the dealership come under pressure,” said company CEO Cindy Allen.
Service contracts increased their share of F&I sales by a percentage point year-over-year to 45% penetration, according to the report, followed by the same jump for gap coverage to 38% and paint-and-fabric protection to 20%. Prepaid maintenance was flat at 16%, and tire-and-wheel plans rose a point to 11%.
LEARN MORE: In F&I, Innovation Is Overrated
Originally posted on F&I and Showroom
More Product & Technology

Car Karaoke Gets Official Platform
The in-vehicle karaoke and sing-along platform by Samsung arm is meant to add traveling enjoyment safely in technology that automakers can tailor to their specific needs.
Read More →
Kia Embraces Clean Energy
A Kia Georgia partnership combines weather protection and renewable energy in a new solar canopy system at Kia’s West Point facility.
Read More →
Honda-Sony Venture Dismantled
For nearly four years, the companies had worked toward the launch of the electric-vehicle brand’s first two models, but the shifting EV market scuttled the plans.
Read More →
Wireless EV Charging is on the Horizon
In what Porsche says is an industry first, its 2026 Cayenne is joining the automaker’s electric SUV lineup with an optional inductive charging system that can be purchased with the vehicle.
Read More →
EV Battery Cycle Life at Risk
Fast charging of electric vehicles provides a solution for range anxiety, but it also poses a risk to battery cycle life due to increased temperatures, according to an EV supply chain data provider.
Read More →
Automaker Increases Parts Recycling
Stellantis is adding a third end-of-life vehicle dismantling facility to feed its growing reuse business sparked in large part by autos’ growing lifespans.
Read More →
Charging Challenges
An annual J.D. Power study finds eroding home EV charging contentment, though there are ways owners can boost theirs. The firm sees auto dealers playing a role.
Read More →
Safety Drives Insurance Rates
Sixteen out of the 20 cheapest vehicles to insure in 2026 are SUVs, according to CarInsurance.com, largely because of their safety features and lower repair costs.
Read More →
Report Finds Year-End F&I Strength
Deal volume ebbed and flowed throughout 2025, but product performance remained steady, according to automotive technology and data intelligence solutions provider StoneEagle.
Read More →
AAMS Training and Mosaic Compliance Services Merge
The strategic combination is intended to expand technology-driven compliance solutions for the automotive industry.
Read More →