U.S. EV sales fell 27% year over year in Q1, signaling a market reset after federal incentives ended. Tesla, Toyota, and Lucid remain key players.
New EV sales in the US fell 28% in Q1 2026 after tax credits expired, while used EV demand surged. Here’s why buyers are shifting—and what it means.
February EV market report shows new EV sales down 26.8% YoY while used EV demand rises. Prices fall, inventory tightens, and affordability drives momentum.
A new Cox Automotive study reveals 69% of Gen Z car shoppers would consider Chinese EV brands. Affordability, trust and brand partnerships could reshape the US market.
As many analysts predicted, sales of new electric vehicles in the U.S. fell sharply in the fourth quarter, following record-breaking results in Q3.
In Q3 2025, U.S. EV sales shattered all previous records, hitting an all-time high 438,487 electric vehicles. EV sales surged 40.7% from the previous quarter and were 29.6% higher than the same period last year.
Electric vehicle sales are on the rise, hitting a new record in August as buyers raced to purchase cars before a major federal tax credit expires.
DHL Supply Chain, the world’s leading logistics provider, and Cox Automotive, the industry leader in connected automotive services, are working together to deliver in-life EV battery services for manufacturers and fleets.