Electric car sales across Europe’s main markets jumped sharply in the first quarter of 2026, driven in part by rising petrol prices linked to the war in Iran.
New battery-electric vehicle registrations rose 29.4% compared to the same period last year, reaching nearly 560,000 across 15 European markets, according to data from E-Mobility Europe and research firm New Automotive.

March was especially strong. Over 240,000 new electric cars were registered that month alone, a 51.3% increase year-on-year. That works out to roughly 22% of all new car registrations across the tracked markets.
The data covers markets that represent around 81% of the combined EU and European Free Trade Association car market, based on national vehicle registers and industry associations.
Europe’s five largest markets — Germany, France, Spain, Italy, and Poland — each recorded BEV growth of more than 40% so far this year.
Italy posted the strongest gain among major markets, up 65%. Its BEV market share rose to 8.6% in March, up from around 5% at the end of 2025.
Germany showed a clear recovery, with around one in four new cars registered in March being fully electric — a 42% year-on-year increase. New government incentive schemes are credited as a contributing factor.
France led the major markets with a 28% BEV share in March, with annual growth of just under 50%. The country’s social leasing program is considered a key driver.
The Nordic countries are well ahead of the rest. Denmark reached an electric share of 76.6% of all new registrations in March. Finland came in at just under 50%.
Norway remains the global leader. In March, 98.4% of all newly registered cars in the country were fully electric.
In the UK, Europe’s second-largest BEV market after Germany, registrations grew 12.8% in Q1. Electric cars made up 22.5% of all new car sales in the country during that period.
The report was published by two organizations that actively promote electric mobility. The raw registration figures come from government sources and are considered reliable.
However, the publishers acknowledge that independent analysis of the precise causes of the growth — such as the split between government subsidies and rising fuel prices — is not yet available.
The estimated reduction of 2 million barrels of oil per year is based on the 500,000-plus EVs registered across the EU and EFTA in Q1 2026.
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