×

European car sales rise modestly in February, Tesla reverses year-long skid

By Thomson Reuters Mar 24, 2026 | 12:01 AM

By Alessandro Parodi

March 24 (Reuters) – New car sales in Europe rose in February after falling in January, while sustained demand for electric vehicles helped Elon Musk’s all-electric ​brand Tesla resume growth for the first time since ‌December 2024, official data showed on Tuesday.

Overall car registrations, a proxy for sales, in the European Union, Britain and the European Free Trade Association were up 1.7% to 979,321 vehicles sold in the month, according to ‌the ​European auto lobby ACEA.

Two-thirds of those were ⁠electrified, either battery-electric, plug-in ⁠hybrid or hybrid.

The EU and Britain are walking back some regulations aimed at reducing CO2 emissions after pressure from domestic carmakers who say they are struggling to turn a profit ​on EV sales while fending off competition from Chinese rivals.

But battery-electric and plug-in hybrid sales have been steadily on ⁠the rise in Europe thanks to ⁠new, cheaper models coming into the market and ​national policies which encourage EV adoption.

Environmental groups warn that the repositioning ​of some petrol models as “mild hybrids” has also contributed ‌to growing EV sales, while only modestly lowering emissions.

TESLA EDGES UP, CLOSE TO BYD

Tesla’s February registrations were up 11.8% year-on-year in February, reversing a thirteen-month negative streak, the ACEA data showed.

They ⁠were marginally lower than those of its Chinese competitor BYD, whose sales more than doubled from the same month of 2025. Both brands ⁠had a market ‌share of 1.8% in the month.

Sales of ⁠top domestic carmakers Volkswagen and Stellantis rose by ​2.2% ‌and 9.5%, respectively, while Renault’s fell by 14.3%.

In ​the EU, ⁠total car sales rose 1.4% to 865,437 vehicles.

Registrations of battery electric, plug-in hybrid and hybrid electric cars were up 20.6%, 32.1% and 10.1%, respectively, to account collectively for 67% of the bloc’s registrations, up from 58.5% in February 2025.

(Reporting by Alessandro Parodi; Editing ​by Jan Harvey)