European car sales fall in January, petrol cars sharply decline

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European car sales fall in January, petrol cars sharply decline

A car drives past snow-covered cars parked in a car park after snowfall in Rzeszow, Poland, November 21, 2025. Agencja Wyborcza.pl/Patryk Ogorzalek via REUTERS · Reuters

Reuters

Tue, February 24, 2026 at 2:19 PM GMT+9 2 min read

Feb 24 (Reuters) - New car sales in Europe fell year-on-year in January for the first time since June, weighed by ‌declines in major markets including Germany, France, Belgium and Poland, ‌data from the European auto lobby ACEA showed on Tuesday.

The downturn was sharpest in ​Norway, where new car registrations, a proxy for sales, fell about 76% compared to the same month in 2025.

WHY IT MATTERS

Europe’s car industry is in the midst of a major transformation, with traditional car makers struggling ‌to compete with cheaper ⁠Chinese models and with a now-delayed push towards decarbonisation.

They are also navigating an even more uncertain trade environment ⁠after most U.S. tariffs were ruled unlawful by the Supreme Court of the United States on Friday.

BY THE NUMBERS

Sales in the European Union, Britain, ​Switzerland, Norway ​and Iceland fell 3.5% to 961,382 ​cars in January, ACEA’s data ‌showed.

Petrol car registrations fell about 26% compared to the previous January, shrinking dramatically in France, by 49%, and in Germany, by 30%.

They went from accounting for almost a third of the market share in Europe to just over a fifth in the period.

In turn, battery-electric, plug-in ‌hybrid and hybrid- electric cars were ​up about 14%, 32% and 6%, and ​collectively accounted for 69% of ​new registrations, up from 59% in January 2025.

Registrations of ‌Volkswagen, BMW, Renault and Toyota fell ​3.8%, 5.7%, 15% and ​13.4%, respectively, while those of BYD surged 165%.

Stellantis and Mercedes recorded gains of 6.7% and 2.8%, respectively.

U.S. automaker Tesla continued its ​downward trend with ‌a 17% year-on-year decline, the thirteenth month in a row ​in which sales have shrunk, according to ACEA’s data.

(Reporting by ​Javi West LarrañagaEditing by Tomasz Janowski)

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