In January 2026, BYD outsold Tesla by a 10-to-1 margin in Australia's electric vehicle market, with 5,001 units versus Tesla's 501—a 641% surge for BYD and 32% decline for Tesla year-over-year. This builds on BYD's 2025 global overtake of Tesla and intensifying local competition in a market growing 93.3% annually.
Australia's EV market grew 93.3% year-over-year in January 2026, but Tesla continued losing ground to BYD. Data from the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries, via Electrek, shows BYD at 5,001 sales (up 641% from January 2025) against Tesla's 501 (down 32%).
This follows BYD's dominance in 2025 Australia sales (over 52,000 units, up 156%; Tesla down 24%) and globally surpassing Tesla's annual EV volume. Early 2025 saw Tesla with a slight Australian edge, but by May, BYD's Sealion 7 became the top EV.
Tesla faces broader headwinds, including a 46% profit drop in 2025 and CEO Elon Musk's shift toward AI and robotics—highlighted by his shareholder-approved $1 trillion pay package. An Electrek reader noted: "With Tesla pivoting away from cars, these numbers will only get more prevalent." Electrek's Fred Lambert added: "BYD's strategy is working: Flood the market with competitively priced vehicles across every segment."
BYD offers diverse, affordable options like the sub-$30,000 Dolphin and Sealion 7 (rivaling Model Y), versus Tesla's Model 3 and Y only. Australian consumers gain from cheaper EVs with low operating costs and eco-benefits. While U.S. tariffs limit Chinese EVs, analyst Michael Dunne foresees U.S.-China partnerships expanding affordable options.