According to the data, May 2026 was a successful month for electric vehicles in the United Kingdom. Outside of December, when year-end fleet deals consistently distort the numbers, battery electric vehicles accounted for 27.3% of new car registrations, the highest percentage ever. The numbers for Tesla increased by 45%. May saw the highest level of overall auto sales since 2019. On the surface, it appeared to be the kind of advancement the government was hoping to highlight.
33% of all new cars sold this year must be electric due to the UK’s Zero Emission Vehicle mandate. That still falls far short of May’s record 27.3%. Although April’s percentage of 39% sounds better, fleet managers and dealers have been subtly using registration-front-loading to lessen the mandate’s monthly pressure. In order to survive regulations that it cannot yet naturally comply with, the industry is essentially manipulating the calendar.

The expense involved is what makes this uncomfortable. Manufacturers have been offering steep discounts, sometimes as much as £10,000 or £11,000 per car, to get EVs out of forecourts and onto driveways. Over £10 billion has been spent over the past two years, according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders. It’s not a rounding error. That is a structural issue, and there isn’t a clear point at which it fixes itself without either a significant shift in consumer demand or a change in the regulations.
It appears that the government is aware of this. The 2030 target, which is currently set at 80% of all new car sales being electric, is reportedly being discussed by Downing Street with business leaders. The range of numbers being floated is 50% to 70%. Although it’s unclear when exactly, a formal consultation is anticipated. Who pushed for this is clear: the SMMT, automakers, and their unions have been advocating for relief for years. Sharon Graham of Unite referred to the current course as “an act of self-harm.” You wouldn’t expect that statement from a union that is usually more concerned with protecting jobs than with the subtleties of policy.
The unyielding variable is still private buyers. The government’s November budget announcement of a 3p-per-mile road charge, which will take effect in April 2028, has undermined consumer confidence regarding EV operating costs. Fuel duty receipts have been decreasing as more drivers switch to electric vehicles, so it’s a reasonable policy from a revenue perspective. However, the timing seems strange, coming at a time when the government is simultaneously attempting to expedite the EV transition. A few potential purchasers are waiting and observing. That reluctance is genuine.
Then there is the Chinese question, which Westminster tends to avoid while the industry frequently brings it up. Just over 10% of the European EV market is currently held by Chinese manufacturers, and this percentage is predicted to rise. Unlike the EU, which took action to safeguard its own manufacturers, the UK does not have any significant tariff barriers. MG is already well-known on British roads thanks to SAIC’s support. In some industry circles, there is a theory that the UK government may be delaying tariffs in order to use access to the British market as leverage to draw in Chinese factory investment. It is feasible. It’s also the type of computation that tends to go horribly wrong if it goes wrong.
The honest assessment of 2026 is that, while the EV transition is taking place in Britain, it is occurring unevenly and at a considerable financial cost to the sector that was meant to gain from it. Chinese manufacturers and early adopters who made purchases before the tightening of the incentive environment have been the main winners thus far. The manufacturers cutting their profit margins, the dealers with unsold inventory, and the commuters in the outer suburbs who will eventually have to pay per-mile fees for the cars they were promised would save them money are the losers. The government is still debating what it truly wants the target to be somewhere in the middle.
It’s not a crisis. However, it’s not the tidy success story that anyone had in mind.
FAQs
Q1: Did UK electric car sales hit a record in 2026?
Yes — EVs claimed 27.3% of new car sales in May 2026.
Q2: Why is the UK government considering weakening the EV target?
Manufacturers are losing billions by discounting EVs to meet mandated sales quotas.
Q3: What is the UK’s current 2030 EV sales target?
80% of all new car sales must be electric by 2030.
Q4: How are Chinese EV brands affecting the UK market?
Chinese manufacturers hold a growing market share with no UK tariff barriers in place.
Q5: Will UK EV owners face new running costs?
A 3p-per-mile road charge arrives for EV owners from April 2028.
