EV market share comparisons are messy because every market uses a different denominator. China counts NEV (BEV + PHEV + range-extender + fuel-cell). Europe usually reports BEV alone and sometimes adds PHEV. India reports retail (Vahan) vs dispatches (SIAM). To compare fairly, you have to read each country on its own terms. Below is the verified April 2026 picture for the seven markets AutoNergy tracks, with the source body named for each.
China: NEV 62.8%, the rest of the world is now playing catch-up
China's new-energy vehicle (NEV) penetration hit a record 62.8% of monthly passenger-vehicle retail in April 2026. NEV in the Chinese definition includes BEV plus PHEV plus the range-extender vehicles that BYD, Li Auto and others now ship in volume. The April number is not an outlier, China crossed 50% NEV penetration in 2024 and has been adding 5 to 7 percentage points each year. The headline catch: total Chinese passenger-vehicle retail was down roughly 20% in April 2026, a softer demand month that the NEV mix-shift partially masks.
Germany: BEV 25.8%, a quieter milestone
Germany's KBA reported April 2026 with battery-electric share at 25.8% of new passenger-car registrations. The number is significant for two reasons. First, it is well above the 2024 trough that followed the cut in the German EV incentive. Second, it puts Germany ahead of most other large Western European markets on pure-BEV share.
United Kingdom: two million EVs and a +24% market
The UK passenger-car market jumped 24% year-on-year in April 2026, partly a tax-change rebound. More important for the long arc: April was the month the UK registered its two-millionth EV cumulatively. The ZEV mandate is structurally pulling BEV share upward each year and the OEM mix has adjusted.
Ireland: BEV 22.35%, doubled year-on-year
Ireland's SIMI Motorstats published April 2026 with 10,184 new cars, up 17% YoY. The signal underneath: 2,779 battery-electric registrations, against 1,335 in April 2025, a year-on-year jump of +109.7%. BEV share for the month sat at 22.35%. The Skoda Enyaq was the best-selling EV.
United States: fourth straight monthly decline
The US passenger-vehicle market in April 2026 posted its fourth straight monthly decline as the tariff-driven pull-forward of late 2025 unwound. EV share gains have slowed materially compared with Europe and China, and the federal incentive landscape remains uncertain. California continues to be the strongest US state for EV penetration.
India: record April, Tata leads the EV table
India's FADA reported April 2026 PV retail at a record 4.07 lakh units (407,000 cars) for the month. Within the EV slice, Tata Motors holds approximately 60% of the EV passenger-car market, with Maruti's recently launched eVitara starting to close the gap.
Japan: the global laggard, by design
Japan continues to be the lowest BEV-share market of the seven AutoNergy tracks. Toyota's preference for hybrid and hydrogen powertrains over pure-battery, combined with consumer caution and a kei-car ecosystem optimised for internal combustion, means BEV share in Japan stays in low single-digits. The hybrid share, however, is the highest in the world.
The leaderboard, by April 2026 BEV share
Re-ranked by pure battery-electric share, not NEV: China leads (BEV is roughly two-thirds of the 62.8% NEV figure, so BEV share is around 40% plus). Germany follows at 25.8%, then Ireland at 22.35%, the UK in the mid-20s under its ZEV mandate, the USA below 10% and in decline, India in low single-digits of total PV with EVs dominated by Tata, and Japan last below 5%.
Open the live Global dashboard for the cross-country comparison with monthly bars and source citations, or the per-country dashboards from the rail.