Building on late-2025 gains, BYD continued to outpace Tesla in key European markets in January 2026 while securing entry into Canada via a landmark trade deal. Detailed sales data shows BYD's explosive growth amid Tesla's continued slump, signaling deepening shifts in the global EV market driven by pricing, policy, and competition.
January 2026 sales data underscores BYD's sustained momentum in Europe, following its strong December 2025 performance. In Germany, BYD registrations surged more than 10-fold from 235 vehicles in January 2025 to over 2,500 units, per the Federal Motor Transport Authority—more than double Tesla’s figure—despite a 6.6% overall market decline to 193,981 vehicles, where EVs held 22% share.
Spain saw BYD register 1,962 vehicles (up 64.6%), claiming 13.6% market share and leading in both fully electric (1,039 units, ahead of Kia and Mercedes) and plug-in hybrids; Tesla placed fourth with 458 BEVs. In the UK, BYD's 1,326 BEVs rose nearly 21% year-over-year.
Tesla's woes persisted, with 44% year-over-year registration drops in five major markets—the third straight year of declines. Sales plunged 88% in Norway (to 83), 67% in the Netherlands, 42% in France (to 661, lowest in over three years), and 57% in the UK (to 647), offset only slightly by gains in Sweden (+26%) and Denmark (+3%). Factors include Tesla’s aging Model Y and policy changes like Norway’s reduced EV incentives. Volkswagen had already surpassed Tesla as Europe’s top EV brand in 2025 (274,000 vs. 235,000 units).
A major expansion opportunity emerged on January 16, 2026, when Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney signed a trade pact with China, allowing up to 49,000 Chinese EVs yearly at a reduced 6.1% tariff (from 100%), scaling to 70,000 in five years with half under CAD 35,000 by 2030. In return, China lowered tariffs on Canadian canola. Carney remarked, “At its best, the Canada-China relationship has created massive opportunities... forging a new strategic partnership.”
BYD, with pre-approved plants in Shenzhen, Xi’an, and an Ontario bus facility, is primed to launch affordable models like the Seagull and Dolphin ($20,000–$30,000). The deal drew criticism: Ontario’s Doug Ford urged a boycott, unions worried about jobs, and U.S. President Donald Trump threatened tariffs. Forecasts suggest Chinese EVs could take 23% of Canada’s EV sales in year one, saving buyers CAD 6,700 per vehicle.
BYD’s 2025 global EV sales lead over Tesla highlights this competitive pivot, propelled by cost advantages and strategic agreements.