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Australian dealer group says EV demand has flatlined despite sales growth


A survey commissioned by the Australian Automotive Dealer Association (AADA) claims demand for electric vehicles (EVs) has ‘flatlined’, despite EV market share gains in 2025.

The survey of 2000 Australian motorists, commissioned by the peak body for car dealers in Australia and conducted by Melbourne-based Zing Insights in November 2025, found 38 per cent of respondents intend to buy an EV as their next primary new-vehicle purchase.

That figure is unchanged from the AADA’s 2022 survey and one percentage point lower than its 2024 result (39 per cent).

“Our members are committed to supporting Australia’s transition to lower-emissions vehicles and want to meet Australian drivers’ needs,” said AADA chief executive James Voortman in a media release.

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“However, new-car dealers are not yet seeing a significant increase in the number of consumers intending to purchase an EV at the scale required.”

Despite this, Australians bought more new EVs in 2025 than ever before, with 103,269 sales recorded across the full calendar year, representing a 13.1 per cent year-on-year increase.

As a result, EVs’ share of all new vehicles sold in 2025 rose from 7.4 per cent in 2024 to 8.3 per cent.

That growth outpaced the broader new-vehicle market, which expanded by a modest 0.3 per cent over the same period.