DETROIT - The nation's automakers are bracing for quieter showrooms and slower sales this autumn after the "cash for clunkers" program offered a big but unsustainable boost in August.

U.S. sales of cars and light trucks rose to 1.3 million in August, a 30 percent increase from July. It also was the first monthly year-over-year gain since October 2007.

Ford, Toyota, Hyundai and Honda were the big winners as consumers snapped up their fuel-efficient cars. Rivals Chrysler and General Motors endured another month of falling sales, although their high-mileage vehicles did better.

But the August industry gains could be followed by a slowdown this month and for the rest of the fall, automakers and analysts warned Tuesday. Although the federal clunkers program succeeded in bringing in new buyers, a large portion were people who planned to buy vehicles later in the year.

Now the question is whether automakers will need to roll out an expensive new round of rebates and low-cost financing to spur sales.

Cash for clunkers, which ended Aug. 24, drew hordes of buyers into quiet dealerships by offering up to $4,500 toward new, more fuel-efficient cars and trucks. The hefty rebates gave automakers and dealers a lift, spurring 690,114 new sales, many of them during August, at a taxpayer cost of $2.88 billion.

Several automakers said their supplies plummeted last month, especially for fuel-efficient models. That could make it harder for customers to find the exact model they want. Still, the coming months might offer some stability in an auto sales market that's been floundering for more than a year. Even before the program began in late July, sales were showing small signs of improvement.

"We believe the fourth quarter will be better than the second quarter," as the broader economy shows signs of recovery, said Ken Czubay, Ford's vice president of U.S. marketing and sales.

August sales at Ford totaled 181,826 cars and light trucks, up 17 percent from a year earlier, when high fuel prices and growing economic uncertainty kept car buyers at home.

Two of Ford's vehicles -- the Focus and Escape -- ranked among the top-selling cars under the clunkers program. Sales of the Focus rose 56 percent while those of the Escape small sport-utility vehicle climbed 49 percent.

Sales rose for Ford pickup trucks, which are popular among contractors and other small businesses. Ford's F-Series rose nearly 13 percent. Those results, plus a 57.4 increase in sales of the St. Paul-made Ranger -- a small version of the F-150 -- may reflect that the "toughest part of the recession, the most dramatic declines" are over, the company said.

Japanese automakers Toyota Motor Corp. and Honda Motor Co. also posted gains year-over-year in August. Toyota sales rose 6.4 percent to 225,088; Honda sales rose 9.9 percent to 161,439.

At General Motors Co., sales fell 20 percent to 245,550. Chrysler sales fell 15 percent to 93,222 units.