
The UK’s new car market recorded its strongest May performance since before the pandemic, signaling renewed momentum across the automotive sector. According to data from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT), total registrations rose 7.1% year-on-year to 160,662 units.
Despite the rebound, volumes remain 12.6% below pre-pandemic levels, highlighting that recovery is still underway even as market dynamics continue to shift rapidly toward electrification.
Private Buyers Drive Market Recovery
A key driver of growth was the resurgence in private consumer demand. Registrations from private buyers climbed 17.2%, supported by stronger incentives, increased model availability, and aggressive manufacturer pricing strategies across multiple segments.
Fleet demand showed only modest growth of 1.8%, yet still accounted for a dominant 57.1% of total registrations. In contrast, the small business sector declined by 18.8%, though the volume loss remained limited at just 720 units.
Overall, improved affordability and a broader selection of vehicles have helped bring hesitant buyers back into the market.
Electrified Vehicles Continue to Gain Share
The most significant transformation continues to come from the accelerating shift toward electrified powertrains.
– Petrol registrations fell 7.1%
– Diesel declined 2.2%
– Hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs) rose 1.8%
– Plug-in hybrids surged 23.9%, reaching 13.8% market share
– Battery electric vehicles (BEVs) jumped 34.2%, achieving a record 27.3% share
The strong performance of BEVs marks their highest monthly share so far in 2026, driven by growing model availability, intensifying competition, and sustained discounting from manufacturers.
EV Incentives and Competition Fuel Demand
Several factors are reinforcing the transition toward electric mobility. Expanding model choice across price segments is making EVs more accessible, while continued manufacturer incentives are helping close the affordability gap with internal combustion vehicles.
Government support measures, including the Electric Car Grant, have also played a role in stimulating demand, particularly in the private buyer segment. At the same time, broader economic uncertainty is encouraging consumers to prioritize lower running costs and future-proof technologies.
Targets Still Out of Reach Despite Strong Growth
Even with strong BEV momentum, the UK remains off pace for its regulatory trajectory. Year-to-date, BEVs account for 23.9% of total registrations, significantly below the 33% requirement for 2026.
This widening gap highlights the growing tension between policy ambition and market reality. While regulatory flexibilities may help bridge part of the shortfall, sustained demand growth will be necessary to align with mandated targets.
Long-Term Outlook: Ambition vs Market Reality
The UK government’s latest Carbon Budget outlines an ambitious path toward near-total electrification, projecting that EVs could represent up to 95% of new car and van sales by 2030.
However, current market conditions suggest that such a transition would require a dramatic acceleration in adoption rates, well beyond current trends. Industry observers note that achieving this trajectory would depend on significantly expanded fiscal support, infrastructure investment, and long-term policy stability.
Without these measures, there is a risk that compliance costs will rise for manufacturers, consumer choice may narrow, and the pace of fleet renewal could slow—ultimately affecting progress toward transport decarbonization goals.
May’s performance confirms that the UK car market is in a phase of gradual recovery, with electrification firmly at the center of its transformation. Battery electric vehicles continue to gain ground at record levels, but the gap between ambition and delivery is widening—placing renewed focus on policy, affordability, and infrastructure as key enablers of the next phase of growth.
[source: SMMT]




