Germany Holding Out for ‘Real Boom’ on EVs Despite Strong 2025: EY Analyst Insights

By Karanth

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Germany Holding Out for 'Real Boom' on EVs

Image source: auto.economictimes.indiatimes.com

Germany Holding Out for ‘Real Boom’ on EVs: Overview

  • Electric vehicles captured 19.1% of Germany’s new car market in 2025, up from 13.5% in 2024 and 18.4% in 2023.
  • Total registrations: 2.9 million; 545,142 BEVs sold (+43% YoY from 2024, +4% from 2023).
  • Growth rebound after subsidy end muted in 2024; new low-income private buyer subsidy from November 2025.
  • EY’s Constantin Gall says a true “boom” is protracted; foreign brands (cheaper models) are likely to benefit more.
  • Forecast: 1% overall market growth in 2026 (down from 1.4% in 2025).

Germany’s EV Market Grows Strongly in 2025 But Awaits True ‘Boom’: EY Highlights Challenges Ahead

Germany, Europe’s largest automotive market, closed 2025 with encouraging electric vehicle progress, yet industry experts caution that a genuine mass-market “boom” remains elusive. Battery-electric vehicles (BEVs) achieved a 19.1% share of new registrations—a solid improvement from 13.5% in 2024 and slightly above 18.4% in 2023. Total new car registrations reached 2.9 million, with 545,142 pure EVs sold, marking a robust 43% year-on-year increase from the subdued 2024 (post-subsidy end) and a modest 4% rise over 2023.

This rebound reflects recovering consumer confidence and the impact of a new subsidy introduced in November 2025, targeted specifically at low-income private buyers. However, Constantin Gall, EY’s mobility specialist, described the trajectory as “more protracted and difficult than anticipated,” noting that while numbers are positive, a transformative explosion in demand has not materialized.

The growth came against headwinds: lingering effects from the 2024 subsidy withdrawal, infrastructure gaps, and intensifying competition from affordable imports. Foreign brands with strong lower-priced EV lineups are expected to capture disproportionate benefits from the new incentive, potentially pressuring domestic manufacturers like Volkswagen, BMW, and Mercedes-Benz.

EY forecasts modest 1% overall market growth in 2026 (down from 1.4% in 2025), suggesting sustained but not explosive EV expansion.

2025 Key EV Market Figures

Metric202520242023Notes
BEV Market Share19.1%13.5%18.4%Steady rise post-2024 dip
Total Registrations2.9 millionN/AN/AStrong overall market
BEV Sales545,142~381,000 (est.)~524,000 (est.)+43% YoY from 2024; +4% from 2023

The 43% surge from 2024 highlights a rebound after the subsidy shock; new low-income aid likely contributed to late-year momentum.

Drivers Behind 2025 Growth

  • New subsidy (November 2025): Targeted private buyers to stimulate demand.
  • Model availability: Expanding affordable options from global players.
  • Consumer recovery: Post-subsidy adjustment phase complete.

Yet Gall’s “protracted” assessment points to structural hurdles: charging network density, grid readiness, and premium pricing for many domestic EVs.

Challenges and Competitive Landscape

Foreign brands—particularly Chinese with cost advantages—are positioned to gain more from incentives due to broader entry-level offerings. Local OEMs face pressure to accelerate affordable EV development.

Infrastructure remains a bottleneck: uneven fast-charger coverage outside urban areas slows broader adoption.

Outlook for 2026: Modest Growth Ahead

EY’s 1% market forecast signals caution: no explosive boom expected soon. Policy stability, infrastructure investment, and competitive pricing will determine if 2026 builds on 2025 or plateaus.

For consumers, stronger selection and incentives continue, but a true mass-market shift awaits further enablers.

The Bigger Picture: Germany’s Cautious EV Path

Unlike Norway’s near-total electrification or China’s volume dominance, Germany’s transition is measured—balancing legacy ICE strength with green goals. 2025’s solid gains show progress, but Gall’s realism underscores the journey’s length.

As Europe navigates subsidy changes and trade dynamics, Germany’s experience offers lessons: incentives work, but infrastructure, affordability, and competition decide the pace.

Source: auto.economictimes.indiatimes.com

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