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Tracking global data on electric vehicles

Explore data on electric car sales and stocks worldwide.

First published in February 2024. Last updated in May 2025.
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Electric vehicles are an essential solution to decarbonizing transport.

Electric cars tend to have a lower carbon footprint than petrol or diesel cars over their lifetimes. While more carbon is emitted in the manufacturing stage, this “carbon debt” tends to pay off quickly once they’re on the road. The carbon savings are higher in countries with a cleaner electricity mix, and these savings will also increase as countries continue to decarbonize their electricity grids.

How quickly are countries moving to electrified transport? Which countries are leading the way?

In this article, we look at data from across the world on electric vehicle (EV) sales and the stock on the road.

This data comes from the International Energy Agency. It publishes its Global EV Outlook every year. We will update this data every time a new release is published.

Sales of new cars

What share of new cars are electric?

Sales of electric cars started from a low base but are growing quickly in many markets.

Globally, over 1-in-5 (22%) of new cars sold were electric in 2024. This share was 92% in Norway, and in China, it was almost 50%.

In the chart below, you can explore these trends across the world.

Here, “electric cars” include fully battery-electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids.

Share of new cars sold that are electric, 2010 to 2024

Electric cars include fully battery-electric and plug-in hybrids.

World2010202420142016201820200%20%40%60%80%100%Norway201020242014201620182020United Kingdom201020242014201620182020European Union (27)2010202420142016201820200%20%40%60%80%100%China201020242014201620182020United States201020242014201620182020

Share of new cars sold that are electric, 2024

Electric cars include fully battery-electric and plug-in hybrids.

Norway92%Sweden58%China48%United Kingdom28%World22%European Union (27)21%Germany19%United States10%India2.1%

Fully-electric cars vs. plug-in hybrids

“Electric cars” include battery-electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles. The difference is that fully battery-electric cars do not have an internal combustion engine. In contrast, plug-in hybrids have a rechargeable battery and electric motor, and an internal combustion engine that runs on gasoline.

That means a plug-in hybrid could be driven as a standard petrol car if the owner did not charge the battery. The battery in plug-in hybrids is smaller and has a shorter range than battery-electric cars, so over longer distances, the car starts running on gasoline once the battery has run out.

Since plug-in hybrids will often run on petrol, they tend to emit more carbon than battery-electric cars. However, they do usually have lower emissions than petrol or diesel cars.

In the first chart below you can see electric car sales broken down by these two technologies. This is given as a share of new cars sold each year.

In the second, you will find the share of new electric cars sold that are fully battery-electric.

Share of new cars sold that are battery-electric and plug-in hybrid, 2010 to 2024

Plug-in hybrids cars can run using an electric motor and rechargeable battery, or an internal combustion engine. Theirbattery is usually smaller than a fully battery-electric.

Battery-electricPlug-in hybridWorld201020242012201420162018202020220%20%40%60%80%100%Norway20102024201220142016201820202022European Union (27)20102024201220142016201820202022United Kingdom201020242012201420162018202020220%20%40%60%80%100%China20102024201220142016201820202022United States20102024201220142016201820202022

Share of new electric cars that are fully battery-electric, 2012 to 2024

"Electric cars" often refer to both fully battery-electric cars and plug-in hybrids. Shown is the share of new electric carssold that are fully battery-electric.

20122024201420162018202020220%20%40%60%80%100%NorwayUnited KingdomWorldSwedenChina

How many new electric cars are sold each year?

The chart below shows the total number of new electric cars sold. Again, this includes fully battery-electric and plug-in hybrids.

Clicking on any country will show how sales have changed over time.

Number of new electric cars sold, 2024

Electric cars include fully battery-electric and plug-in hybrids.

No data0100,000200,000500,0001 million2 million5 million10 million

How many new internal combustion engine cars and electric cars are sold each year?

Based on the data published by the IEA on the number of electric cars sold, and EV sales as a share of all new cars, we can calculate the absolute number of new cars of each type sold each year.

These figures suggest that global sales of non-electric cars peaked in 2018. This aligns with other estimates published elsewhere; for example, Bloomberg New Energy Finance reported that sales peaked in 2017.

You can explore this data for other countries in the chart below, too.

Number of new cars sold, by type, World

Electric cars include fully battery-electric and plug-in hybrids.

2010202420112012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220230 cars10 million cars20 million cars30 million cars40 million cars50 million cars60 million cars70 million cars80 million carsElectric carsNon-electric cars

Stocks of cars in use

What share of cars on the road are electric?

The cars that are on the road today represent sales data over more than a decade.

This can be captured in a metric called “stocks”. It’s an approximation of the number of cars that are in use and represents the balance of cars being added and those that are being retired.

Because people use their cars for a long time, it takes time before new sales have a visible influence on car stocks. That means the share of cars on the road that are electric is much lower than the share among new sales.

The share of cars in use that are electric is shown in the chart below.

Share of cars currently in use that are electric, 2010 to 2024

Electric cars include fully battery-electric and plug-in hybrids.

201020242012201420162018202020220%5%10%15%20%25%30%35%NorwaySwedenChinaWorldUnited States

How many electric cars are on the road?

The number of electric cars on the road is the cumulative total of sales over the years (minus any cars that have been taken off the road).

The total number of electric car stocks is shown in the chart below. There are now almost 60 million electric cars in use globally, and this is growing quickly. In 2022, this figure was just 26 million.

Electric car stocks, 2010 to 2024

Car stocks represent the number of cars that are in use. It is the balance of cumulative sales over time and the number ofcars that have been retired or taken off the road. Electric cars include fully battery-electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids.

20102024201220142016201820202022010 million20 million30 million40 million50 million60 millionWorldChinaEuropean Union (27)United States

Endnotes

  1. Many studies make this point. Here are just a few:

    See Zeke Hausfather’s article in the Carbon Brief.

    Simon Evans’s fact-check on electric cars, also in the Carbon Brief.

    This report is from the International Council on Clean Transportation (ICCT).

    The International Energy Agency’s EV Lifecycle Assessment Calculator, where you can explore this data for different vehicle sizes, driver profiles, mileage, and for countries with different electricity mixes.

  2. The data below comes from the IEA’s Outlook for 2025.

    IEA (2025), Global EV Outlook 2025, IEA, Paris https://www.iea.org/reports/global-ev-outlook-2025, License: CC BY 4.0.

  3. How much lower will depend on someone’s driving and charging habits. If they recharge regularly and run mainly on the battery, its emissions will be much lower. The International Energy estimates that a plug-in hybrid emits half as much carbon as a petrol car per kilometer. But again, there are large uncertainties depending on personal usage.

Cite this work

Our articles and data visualizations rely on work from many different people and organizations. When citing this article, please also cite the underlying data sources. This article can be cited as:

Hannah Ritchie (2024) - “Tracking global data on electric vehicles” Published online at OurWorldinData.org. Retrieved from: 'https://archive.ourworldindata.org/20260304-094028/electric-car-sales.html' [Online Resource] (archived on March 4, 2026).

BibTeX citation

@article{owid-electric-car-sales,
    author = {Hannah Ritchie},
    title = {Tracking global data on electric vehicles},
    journal = {Our World in Data},
    year = {2024},
    note = {https://archive.ourworldindata.org/20260304-094028/electric-car-sales.html}
}
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