
Image source: www.ft.com
BYD Beats Tesla in EV Sales as Musk Bets on Robotaxis: Overview
- BYD surpasses Tesla as the world’s top EV seller in 2025 with 2.26 million battery-electric vehicles sold (+28% YoY).
- Tesla deliveries fall 9% to 1.64 million, the second consecutive annual decline.
- Tesla’s Q4 ~418,000 deliveries are down 16%; impacted by the end of the $7,500 US tax credit, competition, and Musk’s political backlash.
- Musk focuses on robotaxis (limited launch) and humanoid robots; investors are optimistic about future tech despite the sales drop.
- BYD faces domestic price wars but expands overseas aggressively.
BYD Overtakes Tesla as Global EV Sales Leader in 2025: Chinese Giant Claims Crown
The electric vehicle world has a new undisputed champion. Chinese automaker BYD has officially surpassed Tesla as the world’s largest seller of battery-electric vehicles in 2025, delivering a symbolic blow to Elon Musk’s once-dominant empire. Full-year figures released in early January 2026 confirm BYD sold 2.26 million pure EVs—a robust 28% increase from 2024—while Tesla’s deliveries declined 9% to 1.64 million, marking the company’s second straight year of falling sales and its steepest annual drop ever.
This milestone caps BYD’s extraordinary rise from a company Musk famously dismissed in 2011 to the global EV throne. Tesla’s Q4 deliveries of approximately 418,000 vehicles fell 16% year-on-year, reflecting a perfect storm: the abrupt end of the $7,500 US federal tax credit in September (prompting a pre-deadline rush followed by softness), intensifying competition from affordable Chinese rivals, and consumer backlash in the US and Europe tied to Musk’s high-profile political activities, including his role in the Trump administration.
Despite the sales slump, Tesla shares ended 2025 up 18.6%, buoyed by investor faith in Musk’s pivot to robotaxis and humanoid robots—futuristic bets that promise massive future revenue even as core car sales falter.
2025 EV Sales Head-to-Head
| Company | 2025 BEV Sales/Deliveries | YoY Change | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| BYD | 2.26 million | +28% | Record exports; strong China + overseas growth |
| Tesla | 1.64 million | -9% | Q4 weakness; second annual decline |
BYD’s total new energy vehicles (EVs + hybrids) exceeded 4.6 million, but its pure BEV figure alone eclipsed Tesla.
Tesla’s Challenges: From Subsidy Loss to Brand Backlash
Tesla’s decline stems from multiple fronts:
- Subsidy expiry: Pre-October rush inflated earlier quarters, leaving Q4 exposed.
- Competition: Affordable Chinese EVs eroded share in Europe/Asia.
- Musk factor: Political involvement sparked protests, vandalism, and boycotts in key markets.
The limited robotaxi rollout (Austin and San Francisco only, with human monitors) fell short of Musk’s ambitious promises.
BYD’s Strengths: Scale, Affordability, Global Push
BYD’s victory highlights:
- Vertical integration: Controls batteries to finished cars for cost advantages.
- Diverse lineup: From budget to premium, plus hybrids cushioning pure-EV risks.
- Export surge: Over 1 million overseas (150% growth), navigating tariffs via local plants (e.g., Hungary).
Domestic price wars squeezed profits, but international expansion provided an offset.
Musk’s Future Bet: Robotaxis and Robots Over Volume Cars
Tesla’s valuation (~$1.5 trillion) increasingly hinges on autonomy:
- Robotaxi service is operational but scaled back from bold predictions.
- Optimus humanoid robots are promised in volume, though timelines are slippery.
Investors buy the vision, looking past car sales weakness.
The Bigger Picture: A Shifting EV Landscape
2025’s crown change signals China’s EV ascent: cost leadership, rapid innovation, and policy support outpacing Western premium focus. Tesla pioneered mass-market EVs, but BYD’s volume mastery now defines leadership.
For the industry, it warns of volatility—subsidies end, preferences shift, and politics intervene. As robotaxis remain nascent, core car competitiveness matters.
BYD’s win isn’t just numbers — it’s proof the EV race favors scale, affordability, and execution today, while tomorrow’s promises keep Tesla afloat.
Source: economictimes.indiatimes.com
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