2025 U.S. EV Sales: Small Annual Decline After Q4 Shock, OEMs and Policy Set Stage for 2026





Summary

Summary

U.S. EV sales slipped an estimated 2% in 2025 versus 2024 as a steep Q4 drop followed the October revocation of federal incentives. Even so, 2025 still ranked as the second-best year on record, with market share at 7.8% compared with 8.1% in 2024, reflecting a market normalizing toward consumer-driven demand.

Key numbers

  • Q4 2025 sales: 234,000 (down 46% quarter over quarter and 36% year over year), the lowest since late 2022.
  • Full-year 2025: Just shy of 2024’s 1.30 million total; second-best year on record.
  • EV market share: 7.8% in 2025 vs. 8.1% in 2024 (Kelley Blue Book).
  • Quarterly share swing: Peak 10.5% in Q3 2025; down to 5.8% in Q4 after incentives ended.
  • Tesla: 589,000 units in 2025 (down 7% YoY), nearly half of U.S. EV sales, led by Model 3 and Model Y.
  • General Motors: 150,000+ units (up 48% YoY), ~13% share, a solid second by volume.

What drove the swings

Policy changes reshaped purchasing timing: buyers pulled forward demand ahead of incentive revocation, lifting Q3 and depressing Q4. Cox Automotive frames the pattern as a structural transition toward a market driven more by product choice, price bands, and charging reliability than by subsidies.

Competitive landscape

Tesla remains dominant but saw a second consecutive annual decline, meaning small percentage shifts carry large unit impacts. GM’s surge, powered by Chevrolet and Cadillac, broadened the field of high-volume players.

Outlook for 2026

  • EV share expected to hover near ~8% as the market matures.
  • New models to support demand: an affordable 2026 Chevrolet Bolt, Rivian R2, and BMW’s next-gen EVs including the iX3.
  • Charging reliability and battery cost/performance improvements should aid gradual growth.
  • Policy remains a key variable, with indications of less regulatory pressure and potential effects from tariffs and trade actions.

Bottom line

Despite a sharp late-year pullback, 2025’s near-record totals underscore a market that is normalizing rather than retreating. Momentum is increasingly anchored in consumer choice, broader model availability, and infrastructure progress, suggesting measured growth ahead.

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