On a recent Tuesday afternoon, every Elroq in the parking lot outside a Skoda dealership in a mid-sized German town—the kind of location that seldom makes headlines—had a sold sticker in its windshield. It wasn’t being filmed for social media. There were no tweets about it. In an odd way, that tells you nearly everything about the current state of the European electric vehicle market.
Even by themselves, the headline numbers are striking. In the spring, battery-electric cars accounted for more than 23% of all new car registrations in Europe, with sales increasing by 42% annually. That is not a slight increase. Just two years ago, when German subsidy cuts caused EV sales to plummet, and pundits began writing the obituary for European electrification, that market’s acceleration would have seemed unthinkable. As it happens, the obituary was published too soon.
What’s more intriguing is who is genuinely gaining from this surge, which is something that most of the breathless coverage tends to overlook. It’s not a Tesla. Despite all the talk about Chinese automakers taking over the continent, it’s not even primarily BYD. Early in 2026, the Volkswagen Group dominated the EV market with a 26 percent market share, built on the success of Volkswagen, Škoda, and Audi. In particular, Skoda has emerged as a relatively quiet phenomenon. When compared to Tesla’s problems, Elroq’s 146 percent year-over-year sales increase in March is almost absurd. The brand is Czech. A low-cost brand in the past. It’s satisfying, a little surprising, and a little overdue to see it surpass the Model 3 in certain months. It’s like watching the quiet kid at school win the spelling bee.
The situation facing Tesla has become extremely complex. The Model Y was Europe’s best-selling EV for the majority of 2025, despite a sharp decline year over year, and the company continues to move real volume. However, the brand has been damaged, and not mainly due to competition. According to a Yale University study, Tesla sales would have increased by 67 to 83 percent—roughly one million to 1.26 million more cars—had Elon Musk not engaged in political activity. It’s a startling figure to consider. It implies that the dent in Tesla’s European fortunes has less to do with engineering and more to do with optics, as customers in showrooms from Rotterdam to Munich subtly cast their votes with their cash.
Europe’s BEV Brand Rankings — April 2026 (Monthly Registrations)
| Rank | Brand | BEV Registrations (April 2026) | YoY Change | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Volkswagen | 119,756 (total brand registrations, incl. ICE) | — | Retained its position as Europe’s most-registered car maker |
| 2 | Skoda | 19,173 | +40% | Driven largely by demand for the new Elroq and the established Enyaq |
| 3 | BMW | 18,128 | — | Secured third place among Europe’s best-selling BEV brands WhichEV |
| 4 | Renault | — | strong growth | Completed the top ten rankings alongside Mercedes-Benz, Kia, Audi, BYD, Tesla and Ford |
| ~9–10 | Tesla | 10,609 | +48% | Showed signs of stabilisation after a challenging start to the year, though still behind Volkswagen, Skoda and BMW in monthly volumes |
Europe’s EV Market — Q1 2026 Cumulative (Jan–Mar), Brand Market Share
| Rank | Brand | Q1 2026 Units | Market Share | YoY Share Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Volkswagen | 96,601 | 8.9% | down 2.2 percentage points year on year |
| 2 | Tesla | 78,642 | 7.3% | up 0.9 percentage points, a 45.4% sales increase |
| 3 | BYD | 73,535 | 6.8% | up 154.7% — the highest year-on-year growth of any brand in the top 10 |
| 4 | Skoda (standalone, Elroq+Enyaq) | 28,305 (Elroq alone) | — | Elroq up 150.4% year-on-year in March alone |
| — | Renault | 60,349 | 5.6% | up 1.3 percentage points, a 66.9% surge — the fastest-growing brand in the top 10 apart from BYD Autovista24 |
Overall Market Snapshot
| Metric | Figure | Period |
|---|---|---|
| BEV market share of all new car sales | 23% | May 2026, up from a 42% YoY jump in overall BEV registrations CleanTechnica |
| BEV registrations | 254,344 units | April 2026, up from 184,146 a year earlier |
| BEV market share | 22.2% | April 2026, up from 17.2% in April 2025 |
| VW Group EV segment share | ~26% | Early 2026, reflecting strong performance across Volkswagen, Škoda, and Audi European Alternative Fuels Observatory |
In the meantime, BYD has been making headlines just by showing up, something Tesla used to do with ease. For the first time, BYD registered 7,231 battery-powered electric vehicles in Europe in May 2025, compared to Tesla’s 7,165. By December, BYD had more than twice as many new registrations in Germany as Tesla, and full-year sales had increased eightfold to 23,306 units, while Tesla’s had dropped by almost half. This pricing logic is almost too straightforward to be dramatic. A comparable BYD Dolphin starts at about €35,500, a standard Tesla Model 3 starts at about €41,000 in Europe, and the smaller Dolphin Surf starts at about €22,990 in many markets. BYD isn’t being chosen because consumers adore the brand narrative. The math works, which is why they are selecting it.
This is where the “winners aren’t who you’d expect” narrative really takes off. By contrast, Renault’s comeback has been almost covert; the Renault 5, a nostalgic play wrapped around a contemporary EV platform, continued to post near-record months through late 2025 and into 2026, helped in part by France’s social leasing program. BMW has also been rising, albeit slowly and steadily, relying on crossovers and an upcoming iX3 that Munich dealers keep hailing as a turning point. It’s difficult to ignore a trend: the most successful brands aren’t always the most intriguing ones. While everyone else was debating brand image, they were the ones who determined pricing, leasing terms, and supply chains.
Beneath all of this is a more subdued regulatory tale. In 2025, BEV sales accounted for 19% of the European market; goals are set to increase this percentage to 23% in 2026 and 28% in 2027. More sales have been moved by EU fleet emissions regulations than by any advertising campaign, which presents an unsettling question for automakers: what will happen to demand when those regulations loosen, as they momentarily did in 2024? Nobody seems to be completely certain. Carmakers successfully lobbied for flexibility. To be honest, it’s still unclear if that becomes a slow leak in momentum or hardly registers.
It’s easy to read too much into one dealership when you’re standing in that Skoda lot and see another sold sticker go up. However, there are instances when the less dramatic, smaller story is the true one. The loudest brand or the most futuristic pitch isn’t winning Europe’s EV boom. For the time being, the winner is the manufacturer of the most commonplace vehicle that people can genuinely afford. This is a much less glamorous story than the one that most headlines portray.
