1920s–1930s In 1924,
Sakichi Toyoda invented the Toyoda Model G Automatic
loom. The principle of
jidoka, which means the machine stops itself when a problem occurs, later became a part of the
Toyota Production System. Looms were built on a small
production line. In 1929, the patent for the automatic loom was sold to the British company
Platt Brothers, generating the starting capital for automobile development. Under the direction of the founder's son,
Kiichiro Toyoda,
Toyoda Automatic Loom Works established an Automobile Division on September 1, 1933, and formally declared its intention to begin manufacturing automobiles on January 29, 1934. A prototype
Toyota Type A engine was completed on September 25, 1934, with the company's first prototype sedan, the
A1, completed the following May. However, the government strongly prioritized the development of trucks, so the company then concentrated on the
G1 truck. The G1 truck was completed on August 25, 1935, and debuted on November 21 in Tokyo, becoming the company's first production model. Modeled on a period Ford truck, the G1 chassis sold for ¥2,900, ¥200 cheaper than the Ford truck. A total of 379 G1 trucks were ultimately produced. In April 1936, Toyoda's first passenger car, the
Model AA, was completed. The sales price was ¥3,350, ¥400 cheaper than
Ford or
GM cars. The company's plant at Kariya was completed in May. In July, the company filled its first export order, with four G1 trucks exported to northeastern China. Kiichiro's brother-in-law
Rizaburo Toyoda was appointed the firm's first president, with Kiichiro as vice-president. Toyota Automatic Loom Works formally transferred automobile manufacturing to the new entity on September 29. The Japanese government supported the company by preventing foreign competitors
Ford and
General Motors from importing automobiles into Japan. At the onset of
World War II, Toyota almost exclusively produced standard-sized trucks for the Japanese Army, which paid one-fifth of the price in advance and the remainder in cash upon delivery.
1940s Japan was heavily damaged in
World War II and Toyota's plants, which were used for the war effort, were not spared. On August 14, 1945, one day before the
surrender of Japan, Toyota's Koromo Plant was bombed by the
Allied forces. After the surrender, the
U.S.-led occupying forces banned passenger car production in Japan. However, automakers like Toyota were allowed to begin building trucks for civilian use, in an effort to rebuild the nation's infrastructure. The U.S. military also contracted with Toyota to repair its vehicles. By 1947, there was an emerging global
Cold War between the Soviet Union and the U.S., who had been allies in World War II. U.S. priorities shifted (the "
Reverse Course") from punishing and reforming Japan to ensuring internal political stability, rebuilding the economy, and, to an extent, remilitarizing Japan. Under these new policies, in 1949, Japanese automakers were allowed to resume passenger car production, but at the same time, a new economic stabilization program to control inflation plunged the automotive industry into a serious shortage of funds, while many truck owners defaulted on their loans. Ultimately, the
Bank of Japan, the
central bank of the country,
bailed out the company, with demands that the company institute reforms.
1950s As the 1950s began, Toyota emerged from its financial crisis a smaller company, closing factories and laying off workers. Meanwhile, the
Korean War broke out, and being located so close to the battlefront, the U.S. Army placed an order for 1,000 trucks from Toyota. The order helped to rapidly improve the struggling company's business performance. In 1950, company executives, including Kiichiro's cousin
Eiji Toyoda, took a trip to the United States where they trained at the
Ford Motor Company and observed the operations of dozens of U.S. manufacturers. The knowledge they gained during the trip, along with what the company learned making looms, gave rise to
The Toyota Way (a management philosophy) and the
Toyota Production System (a
lean manufacturing practice) that transformed the company into a leader in the manufacturing industry. Toyota started developing its first full-fledged passenger car, the
Toyopet Crown, in 1952 and started production in 1955. Prior to the Crown, Toyota had been outsourcing the design and manufacturing of auto bodies, which were then mounted on truck frames made by Toyota. The project was a major test for Toyota, who would need to build bodies and develop a new chassis that would be comfortable, but still stand up to the muddy, slow, unpaved roads common in Japan at the time. The car was met with positive reviews from around the world. After the introduction of the Crown, Toyota began aggressively expanding into the export market; the company entered
Saudi Arabia for the first time in 1955 with Land Cruisers, following an agreement reached with Abdul Latif Jameel (founder of his
company of the same name); Toyota also brought Land Cruisers into neighboring
Yemen in 1956. In 1958, Toyota established a production facility in Brazil, the company's first outside of Japan. In 1957, the
Corona was released as a smaller alternative to the Crown. Following high Corona sales, and Eiji's suggestion, a new factory was built. This was the Motomachi factory. The building had a capacity of 10,000 units per month. The Motomachi Plant was completed in 1959. Toyota entered the United States market in 1958, attempting to sell the Toyopet Crown. The company faced problems almost immediately. The company had to confront for the first time how its name sounded to native speakers of the English language; namely, "Toyota" has the English word "
toy" in its first syllable.
Toyota Motor Sales, USA's first sales administrator James F. McGraw bluntly told his new Japanese supervisors after joining the company in 1959: "'Toy' sounds like a toy and toys break". The Crown was a flop in the U.S. market, with buyers finding it overpriced and underpowered (because it was designed for endurance on the bad roads of Japan, not high-speed performance on the
good roads of America). To take advantage of the moment, Toyota and other automakers started offering affordable economy cars like the
Toyota Corolla, which became
the world's all-time best-selling automobile. Toyota also found success in the United States in 1965 with the
Toyota Corona compact car, which was redesigned specifically for the American market with a more powerful engine. The Corona helped increase U.S. sales of Toyota vehicles to more than 20,000 units in 1966 (a threefold increase) and helped the company become the third-best-selling import brand in the United States by 1967. Toyota's first manufacturing investment in the United States came in 1972 when the company struck a deal with Atlas Fabricators, to produce truck beds in Long Beach, in an effort to avoid the 25% "
chicken tax" on imported light trucks. By importing the truck as an incomplete
chassis cab (the truck without a bed), the vehicle only faced a 4% tariff. Once in the United States, Atlas would build the truck beds and attach them to the trucks. The partnership was successful and two years later, Toyota purchased Atlas. In Southeast Asia, Toyota made efforts to establish domestic production in the Philippines and Indonesia in early 1970s. In the Philippines, it partnered with local company
Delta Motors Corporation. Toyota assisted Delta Motors with capital procurement and technology transfers. In 1973, Delta Motors commenced operations at a new plant, beginning local production of engine blocks for the Toyota Corona
12R engine and other parts. In Indonesia, Toyota established
Toyota Astra Motor as a joint venture with local partner
Astra International in 1971, and conducted significant retooling at the PT Gaya Motor assembly plant. The plant began assembling various models, including the Toyota Corona, Toyota Land Cruiser, large trucks, and the Toyota Corolla, with production surpassing 10,000 vehicles by 1973. For both countries, Toyota developed a
basic utility vehicle (BUV) with the local partners to meet local needs and support technology transfers, in response to domestic production policies in Asia. The first prototype of the BUV was completed in January 1975. The BUV was launched as the Toyota Tamaraw in the Philippines in December 1976, and as the
Toyota Kijang in June 1977. The vehicle was well received in both countries. The
energy crisis of the 1970s was a major turning point in the American auto industry. Before the crisis, large and heavy vehicles with powerful but inefficient engines were common. But in the years after, consumers started demanding high-quality and fuel-efficient small cars. Domestic automakers, in the midst of their
malaise era, struggled to build these cars profitably, but foreign automakers like Toyota were well positioned. This, along with growing
anti-Japanese sentiment, prompted the U.S. Congress to consider import restrictions to protect the domestic auto industry. The 1960s also saw the slight opening of the Japanese auto market to foreign companies. In an effort to strengthen Japan's auto industry ahead of the market opening, Toyota purchased stakes in other Japanese automakers. That included a stake in
Hino Motors, a manufacturer of large commercial trucks, buses and diesel engines, along with a 16.8 percent stake in
Daihatsu, a manufacturer of
kei cars, the smallest highway-legal passenger vehicles sold in Japan. That began what became a long-standing partnership between Toyota and the two companies.
1980s was one of the most popular cars in the world and became
the world's all-time best-selling automobile. After the successes of the 1970s, and the threats of import restrictions, Toyota started making additional investments in the North American market in the 1980s. In 1981, Japan agreed to
voluntary export restraints, which limited the number of vehicles the nation would send to the United States each year, leading Toyota to establish assembly plants in North America. The U.S. government also closed the loophole that allowed Toyota to pay lower taxes by building truck beds in America. Also in 1981, Eiji Toyoda stepped down as president and assumed the title of chairman. He was succeeded as president by
Shoichiro Toyoda, the son of the company's founder. Within months, Shoichiro started to merge Toyota's sales and production organizations, and in 1982 the combined companies became the Toyota Motor Corporation. The two groups were described as "oil and water" and it took years of leadership from Shoichiro to successfully combine them into one organization. In Japan, Toyota offered mid-level luxury cars that were a class below the Crown and Century and offered hardtop coupes and sedans. The
Supra,
Mark II,
Cresta and
Chaser offered several trim packages with different engine displacements to provide buyers with
annual road tax advantages. At the same time, sports cars like
Celica,
Corolla Levin and
Sprinter Trueno sold very well. Efforts to open a Toyota assembly plant in the United States started in 1980, with the company proposing a joint-venture with the
Ford Motor Company. Those talks broke down in July 1981. Eventually in 1984, the company struck a deal with
General Motors (GM) to establish a joint-venture vehicle manufacturing plant called
NUMMI (New United Motor Manufacturing, Inc.) in
Fremont, California. GM saw the joint venture as a way to get access to a quality small car and an opportunity to learn about The Toyota Way and the Toyota Production System. For Toyota, the factory gave the company its first manufacturing base in North America allowing it to avoid any future tariffs on imported vehicles and saw GM as a partner who could show it how to navigate the American labor environment. The plant would be led by
Tatsuro Toyoda, the younger brother of company president Shoichiro Toyoda. The first Toyota assembled in America, a white Corolla, rolled off the line at NUMMI on October 7, 1986. Toyota received its first Japanese Quality Control Award at the start of the 1980s and began participating in a wide variety of
motorsports. Conservative Toyota held on to
rear-wheel-drive designs for longer than most; while a clear first in overall production it was only third in production of front-wheel-drive cars in 1983, behind
Nissan and
Honda. In part due to this, Nissan's
Sunny managed to squeeze by the Corolla in numbers built that year. Before the decade was out, Toyota introduced
Lexus, a new division that was formed to market and service luxury vehicles in international markets. Prior to the debut of Lexus, Toyota's two existing flagship models, the
Crown and
Century, both catered exclusively for the Japanese market and had little global appeal that could compete with international luxury brands such as
Mercedes-Benz,
BMW and
Jaguar. The company had been developing the brand and vehicles in secret since August 1983, at a cost of over US$1 billion. The
LS 400 flagship full-size sedan debuted in 1989 to strong sales, and was largely responsible for the successful launch of the Lexus marque.
1990s In the 1990s, Toyota began to branch out from producing mostly compact cars by adding many larger and more luxurious vehicles to its lineup, including a full-sized pickup, the
T100 (and later the
Tundra), several lines of SUVs, a sport version of the
Camry, known as the
Camry Solara. They would also launch newer iterations of its sports cars, namely the
MR2,
Celica, and
Supra during this era. In Japan, Toyota continued to cater to the growing demand for mid-level luxury cars and offered several conventional and pillared hardtops sedans at its Japanese dealership network. The
Soarer,
Mark II,
Cresta,
Chaser,
Corona EXiV, and
Carina ED found many buyers. At the same time, sports cars like the
Supra,
Celica,
MR2,
Corolla Levin,
Sprinter Trueno, and even the subcompact
Starlet GT reflected a time of prosperity. December 1997 saw the introduction of the
first-generation Toyota Prius, the first mass-produced
gasoline-electric hybrid car. On September 29, 1999, the company decided to list itself on the
New York and
London Stock Exchanges. The later half of the 1990s would also see the Toyoda brothers step back from the company their father had founded. In 1992, Shoichiro Toyoda would shift to become chairman, allowing his brother Tatsuro to become president, a job he held until his retirement in 1995. Also in 2005, Fujio Cho would shift to become chairman of Toyota and would be replaced as president by
Katsuaki Watanabe. In 2007, Toyota released an update of its full-sized truck, the Tundra, produced in two American factories, one in Texas and one in Indiana.
Motor Trend named the 2007
Toyota Camry "Car of the Year" for 2007. It also began the construction of two new factories, one in Woodstock, Ontario, Canada, and the other in Blue Springs, Mississippi, USA. The company was number one in global automobile sales for the first quarter of 2008. Toyota was affected by the
2008 financial crisis and in December 2008 it had its first annual loss in 70 years. In January 2009, it announced the closure of all of its Japanese plants for 11 days to reduce output and stocks of unsold vehicles. In October 2009, Toyota announced that it was establishing an office in South Korea and launched the Camry sedan, Camry hybrid, Prius and the RAV4 during the launching event at the Grand Hyatt Seoul. Between 2009 and 2011, Toyota
conducted recalls of millions of vehicles after reports that several drivers experienced
unintended acceleration. The recalls were to prevent a front driver's side
floor mat from sliding into the
foot pedal well, causing the pedals to become trapped and to correct the possible mechanical sticking of the
accelerator pedal. Akio's promotion by the board marked the return of a member of the Toyoda family to the top leadership role for the first time since 1999.
2010s In 2011, Toyota, along with large parts of the Japanese
automotive industry, suffered from a series of natural disasters. The
2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami led to a severe disruption of the supplier base and a drop in production and exports. Severe flooding during the 2011
monsoon season in Thailand affected Japanese automakers that had chosen Thailand as a production base. Toyota is estimated to have lost production of 150,000 units to the tsunami and production of 240,000 units to the floods. On February 10, 2014, it was announced that Toyota would cease manufacturing vehicles and engines in Australia by the end of 2017. The decision was based on the unfavourable Australian dollar making exports not viable, the high cost of local manufacture, and the high amount of competition in a relatively small local market. Both
Ford Motor Company and
General Motors (
Holden) followed suit, ending Australian production in 2016 and 2017 respectively. The automaker narrowly topped global sales for the first half of 2014, selling 5.1 million vehicles in the six months ending June 30, 2014, an increase of 3.8% on the same period the previous year.
Volkswagen AG, which recorded sales of 5.07 million vehicles, was close behind. In August 2014, Toyota announced it would be cutting its spare-parts prices in China by up to 35%. The company admitted the move was in response to a probe foreshadowed earlier in the month by China's
National Development and Reform Commission of Toyota's Lexus spare-parts policies, as part of an industry-wide investigation into what the Chinese regulator considers exorbitantly high prices being charged by automakers for spare parts and after-sales servicing. In November 2015, the company announced that it would invest over the next five years into
artificial intelligence and robotics research. In 2016, Toyota invested in
Uber. In 2020, a corporate governance report showed that Toyota owns 10.25 million shares of Uber, which was valued at $292.46 million as of March 30, 2020. According to Reuters, this was roughly 0.6 percent of Uber's outstanding shares. In March 2016, Toyota partnered with
Yanmar to create a fiberglass pleasure boat using Yanmar outboard marine diesel engines or Toyota inboard engines. In August 2016, the company purchased all remaining assets of Daihatsu, making the manufacturer of small cars a wholly owned subsidiary of Toyota. On August 27, 2018, Toyota announced an investment of in
Uber's
autonomous cars. In October 2019, Toyota backed the Trump Administration's proposal that federal authority should override California's ability to set its own emissions standards for automobiles. The proposal would reduce California's 2025 fuel efficiency standard from about 54.5 to 37 MPG. This shift by Toyota away from fuel efficiency damaged the company's reputation as a
green brand. It sold 9.528 million vehicles globally despite an 11.3% drop in sales due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. On April 2, 2020,
BYD and Toyota announced a new joint venture between the two companies called BYD Toyota EV Technology Co., Ltd., with the aim of "developing BEVs (Battery Electric Vehicles) that appeal to customers." In March 2021, Toyota, its subsidiary Hino, and Isuzu announced the creation of a strategic partnership between the three companies. Toyota acquired a 4.6% stake in Isuzu while the latter plans to acquire Toyota shares for an equivalent value. The three companies said they would form a new joint venture by April called Commercial Japan Partnership Technologies Corporation with the aim of developing
fuel cell and
electric light trucks. Toyota would own an 80% stake in the venture while Hino and Isuzu would own 10% each. In April 2021, Toyota said that it will buy
Lyft's self-driving technology unit for $550 million and merge it with its newly created
Woven Planet Holdings automation division. In June 2021, the company defended its donations to the United States
Republican lawmakers after they
voted against certifying the results of the
2020 presidential election, saying it did not believe it was "appropriate to judge members of Congress" for that one vote. A report by
Axios found that Toyota was the top donor to 2020 election objectors, by a substantial margin. The company then reversed course in July 2021 and ceased donations to election objectors, releasing a statement saying it understood that its PAC's donations to those objectors, which far outpaced those of any other company, "troubled some stakeholders." Toyota resumed donations after a six-month pause. In December 2021, Toyota announced that it would invest ($70 billion at 2021 exchange rate) in electric vehicles by 2030, launch 30 EV models worldwide by that year, and set a sales target of 3.5 million electric vehicles in 2030. Toyota will increase its software engineer intake to around 40% to 50% of all technical hires from the second quarter of 2022, the move plans to address a transformation to so-called CASE — connected, autonomous,
shared and electric — technologies in an environment of intensifying global competition. In 2021, Toyota told some of its suppliers to increase their semiconductor inventory levels from the conventional three months to five months in response to the
COVID-19 chip shortage. The time it takes Toyota to turn over its inventory increased by around 40% during the past ten years, to 36.36 days . In August 2022, Toyota pledged up to $5.6 billion towards electric vehicle battery production and announced an increase in investment in its plant near
Greensboro, North Carolina. Also in 2022, Toyota managed to maintain its position as the world's best-selling automaker for the third year in a row. In 2022, Toyota signed a deal with the
British government to develop
hydrogen-powered pickup trucks. The
Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy is investing in the research scheme, based at
Burnaston, with a further coming through the
Advanced Propulsion Centre UK (APC). In January 2023, Toyota CEO and President
Akio Toyoda announced that he was stepping down and passing the position on to Koji Sato. Akio is the great-grandson of company founder Rizaburo Toyoda. Sato had previously run Lexus, Toyota's luxury car brand. The change is set to take effect on April 1, 2023. In 2023, after negotiating with the unions, Toyota implemented the largest increase in employee wages in 20 years. In July 2024, Toyota announced plans to build an electric car cell plant in Fukuoka and export them to the rest of Asia. In October 18 2024, Toyota announced to return to Formula 1 after a 15-year absence, partnering with the US-based Haas team. In November 2024, Toyota and
Joby Aviation completed an air taxi test flight in Japan using an electric vertical take-off and landing (eVTOL) aircraft. Toyota had invested $394 million to Joby as part of a strategic alliance on commercial manufacturing. In June 2025, Toyota announced to raise its prices for some vehicles sold in the US by an average of $270 from July 2025 as the US government imposed a 25% tariff on the imported vehicle parts. In October 2025, Toyota announced that it would spinoff the Century nameplate into its own independent marque, which is to be focused on low-production and hand-built ultra-luxury vehicles. Chairman Akio Toyoda explained that this was done to further define the
Century brand from Lexus, Toyota's mass-production luxury marque. In late 2025, with the unveiling of the
GR GT, it was announced that Gazoo Racing would be spun off to be its own independent brand, and will sell vehicles under its own badge, rather than Toyota's. The rebranding of GR models to the new brand will be gradual, beginning with the GR GT, and is expected to be completed in January 2027. == Board of directors ==