Electric vehicle sales worldwide dropped 3% in January 2026 compared to the previous year, extending the slowdown seen after BYD overtook Tesla as the top global EV seller in 2025. Tesla faced sharp declines in key markets like China, the US, and Europe due to policy changes, rising competition, and reputational issues, reporting its lowest sales in China since late 2022.
The electric vehicle (EV) market saw a global downturn in January 2026, with sales falling 3% year-over-year per Benchmark Intelligence data. This follows BYD surpassing Tesla in 2025 full-year sales and signals broader industry challenges from policy shifts.
North American EV sales plummeted 33%, with just 90,000 units sold. In the US, the $7,500 federal tax credit's removal in September 2025 contributed; Tesla's Q4 2025 sales dropped 15% YoY (Cox Automotive), and January was 2% lower than prior year.
In China, the world's largest auto market (EVs ~50% of 2024 sales), government ended key tax exemptions and cut trade-in incentives. Tesla sold under 20,000 vehicles—lowest since late 2022 (China Passenger Car Association)—without new models since Model Y (2021). Local rivals surged: Xiaomi's YU7 outsold Tesla's Model Y over 2:1. BYD, now the 2025 leader, reported 30% January drop.
Europe showed mixed results: overall EV sales up ~25% YoY, but Tesla down sharply—42% in France, 82 in Norway, halved in UK (BYD outsold 4:1). Factors include backlash to CEO Elon Musk's political stances, like supporting Germany's AfD.
US rivals Ford, GM, Stellantis announced >$50B charges on EV ops, pivoting to gas/hybrids. Musk reiterated Tesla's shift beyond cars: phasing out Model X/S for Optimus robots and autonomous vehicles, including next-gen Roadster. "We're literally saying what we're going to do," he told investors.