- New car market rises 7.2% in February with 90,100 vehicles
registered.
- Battery electric vehicle (BEV) volumes up 2.8% as market
share shrinks for second month.
- Year-to-date BEV share at 22.0% but must grow rapidly to
reach mandated 33% this year.
The UK new car market rose by 7.2% in February to 90,100
registrations, according to the latest figures published by the
Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT). The growth
brings the highest February volume in 22 years,1
although the month is conventionally lower volume and therefore
more volatile, with many buyers preferring to wait for the March
numberplate change.
Demand was largely driven by recovering private retail
registrations, up 17.6% to 35,227 units, while fleet uptake grew
by 1.8% and the lower-volume business segment declined by -12.7%.
Fleets remained the largest source of new car registrations,
accounting for 59.4% of the market.
Battery electric vehicle (BEV) uptake rose 2.8% to 21,840 units,
representing 24.2% of the market. February was, however, the
second consecutive month of decline in BEV market share compared
with the same period last year – a dip that partly reflects a
strong start to 2025, when new BEV buyers sought to avoid April's
introduction of new tax rates, and comes after a strong push at
the end last year to comply with the Zero Emission Vehicle
Mandate.2 February's lower overall volumes can also
exaggerate change.
Meanwhile, plug-in hybrids attracted the largest growth in
demand, up 43.5% to claim an 11.6% market share, while hybrid
electric registrations rose 3.3% to a 13.1% share. Petrol demand
also grew, by 5.2% but share slipped to 46.5%, while diesel
volumes continued to decline, down -3.8% to just 4.5% of the
market.
With year-to-date BEV market share at 22.0%, two thirds of the
33% share mandated for 2026, March is set to be a pivotal month.
Manufacturers have already invested billions in new models and
discounts to drive demand, now with support from government's
Electric Car Grant, but circumstances have changed beyond
expectation since the regulation was set. A holistic review of
the transition is needed – and must be completed urgently as
buyer confidence is anticipated to be weakened further amid plans
to introduce a pay per mile tax for EVs (eVED) from 2028.
Mike Hawes, SMMT Chief Executive, said,
“The UK's new car market is continuing to recover and EV volumes
are growing too, even if market share remains disappointing. All
eyes are now on ‘new plate' March, which typically sets the tone
for the year – and given sales of new pure petrol and diesel cars
are currently required to end in less than four years, EV uptake
must accelerate rapidly. Manufacturers have committed monumental
investment to drive demand but such costs cannot be sustained
indefinitely, making a review of the transition an urgent
priority to ensure ambition matches natural demand.”
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Notes to editors
1 February 2004: 91,460 registrations.
2 February 2025: 25.3%.
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