Tesla's China Sales Plunged 60% from September
By Reuters | 10 Nov, 2025
October sales fell 35.8% from last year and 60% from September to claim just 3.2% of China's auto sales.
Tesla's sales in China dropped to 26,006 vehicles in October, their lowest in three years, as the U.S. electric vehicle maker struggles with tepid demand in the hyper-competitive market.
Sales fell 35.8% from a year earlier, down from September's figure of 71,525 when Tesla began deliveries of the Model Y L, a longer-wheelbase and six-seat version of its best-selling Model Y SUV until now only available in China.
Its exports of China-made vehicles rose to a two-year high of 35,491 units last month, however, data from the China Passenger Car Association showed on Monday.
Tesla's share of China's EV market shrank to just 3.2% in October, down sharply from 8.7% the previous month and its lowest in more than three years.
Tesla's poor performance in the world's largest auto market follows dismal sales last month in European countries such as Germany, Spain, the Netherlands, and the Nordics, in the latest sign that it continues to struggle on the continent.
The company faces mounting pressure in China, its second-largest market after the United States in the third quarter.
Xiaomi, with its Tesla challengers, the SU7 sedan and the YU7 SUV, posted record sales of 48,654 units last month, even as accidents involving its sedans stoked EV safety concerns.
China's overall car sales fell expectedly in October, as consumer sentiment weakened amid diminished government subsidies and tax breaks.
(Reporting by Qiaoyi Li and Brenda Goh; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
Articles
- SpaceX, Tesla to Build AI Chip Factories in Austin
- The Mensch Way for Don to Smooth Over His Iran Bad
- Elon Musk Offers to Pay TSA Salaries During Partial Shutdown
- Tencent Debuts ClawBot to Take on Agentic AI from Alibaba, Baidu
- China Pledges More Balanced Trade After Record $1.2 Trillion Surplus
- Airports Step up to Feed Unpaid TSA Workers
- Don Struggles for a Face-Saving Exit from a Self-Created Nightmare
- OpenAI to Double Workforce to 8,000 by End of 2026
- BTS Comeback Concert Shuts Down Central Seoul
- United Cuts 5% of Flights, Plans for $175 per Barrel Oil
