
The U.S. automotive market continued to shift in the first half of 2026, with hybrid vehicles emerging as the strongest growth segment while electric vehicle sales showed early signs of recovery following several difficult quarters.
According to the latest industry estimates from Kelley Blue Book, the overall U.S. new-vehicle market is expected to decline by 2.2% compared to the same period last year. Despite the softer market, hybrid sales are projected to grow by roughly 9%, highlighting continued consumer demand for fuel-efficient vehicles.
Hybrids Gain Momentum
Higher gasoline prices remain one of the biggest factors driving hybrid sales. At the same time, automakers are expanding their hybrid lineups across multiple vehicle segments, giving buyers more choices than ever before.
Several manufacturers have also transitioned popular nameplates away from conventional gasoline-only powertrains, offering them exclusively as hybrid models. This strategy has helped accelerate hybrid adoption while improving fleet-wide fuel efficiency.
As a result, hybrids have become one of the fastest-growing powertrain options in the U.S. market during 2026.
EV Sales Improve Quarter Over Quarter
While hybrid sales continue to accelerate, the electric vehicle market tells a more nuanced story.
Kelley Blue Book estimates that 247,226 battery-electric vehicles were sold in the United States during the second quarter of 2026, representing a 14.7% increase compared with the revised first-quarter total.
However, year-over-year performance remained negative. EV sales declined 20.5% compared with the second quarter of 2025, marking the third consecutive quarter of annual declines.
Even so, the latest results suggest the market correction may be easing. The second-quarter decline was notably smaller than the 27.3% drop recorded in the first quarter and a significant improvement over the more than 36% decline experienced during the fourth quarter of 2025.
The slower rate of decline indicates that U.S. EV demand could be reaching a more stable level after the rapid expansion fueled by government incentives in previous years.
Tesla Maintains Its Market Lead
Most automakers reported lower electric vehicle sales during the second quarter as manufacturers continue adjusting production plans and investment strategies to reflect changing market conditions.
Despite weaker overall demand, Tesla remained the dominant force in the U.S. EV market.
Although the automaker’s sales declined by more than 10% during the first half of 2026, Tesla still represented approximately half of all electric vehicle sales in the United States. The company’s performance continued to be driven primarily by the Model Y and Model 3, which remain among the country’s best-selling EVs.
Chevrolet retained its position as the second-largest EV brand, while Hyundai and Cadillac also remained among the leading manufacturers.
Toyota and Subaru Deliver Strong Growth
Among established automakers, Toyota and Subaru posted some of the strongest year-over-year gains.
Both brands more than doubled their electric vehicle sales compared with the same period in 2025, reflecting growing consumer interest in their expanding EV lineups.
Toyota has become an increasingly important player in the American EV market and now ranks among the five largest electric vehicle sellers in the country.
EV Market Share Levels Off
Battery-electric vehicles accounted for approximately 5.8% of all new-vehicle sales during the second quarter of 2026.
That figure was virtually unchanged from the first quarter but remains well below the record 10.6% market share achieved in the third quarter of 2025, when buyers rushed to purchase eligible vehicles before federal EV incentives expired.
The stabilization suggests the market has adjusted to the post-incentive environment, with demand now being driven more by product competitiveness than government support.
Long-Term Outlook Remains Positive
Although today’s EV market is smaller than it was at its peak in 2025, industry analysts remain optimistic about long-term growth.
A steady flow of new electric vehicle launches, state-level incentive programs, expanding charging infrastructure, and continued consumer interest are expected to support future adoption.
Industry experts also believe the next stage of EV growth will depend less on breakthrough technology and more on delivering vehicles that offer the right combination of affordability, driving range, practicality, performance, and an ownership experience that meets mainstream consumer expectations.
While hybrids currently represent the industry’s strongest growth opportunity, electric vehicles continue to move toward a more sustainable and mature phase of market development, laying the foundation for long-term expansion in the years ahead.
[source: Cox Automotive report in pdf]




