Episode

EV Market Shift 2026: Why Hybrids Are Winning Over Electric Vehicles

Podcast
Electric Vehicles Industry News
Published
Apr 23, 2026
Duration seconds
192
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https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6194458165
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https://traffic.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6194458165.mp3
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/v1/public/podcasts/electric-vehicles-industry-news-7096263/episodes/ev-market-shift-2026-why-hybrids-are-winning-over-electric-vehicles
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/podcast/electric-vehicles-industry-news-7096263/ev-market-shift-2026-why-hybrids-are-winning-over-electric-vehicles.md

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Summary

ELECTRIC VEHICLE INDUSTRY STATE ANALYSIS: PAST 48 HOURS The global electric vehicle market is experiencing significant turbulence as of late April 2026, marked by sharp regional divergence and a fundamental shift in consumer preferences away from pure EVs toward hybrid technology. In the United States, the outlook remains challenging. California, the nation's largest EV market, saw zero-emission vehicle sales plummet 40 percent in the first quarter compared to the same period last year, with total registrations falling to 57,111 from 95,520. Tesla registrations specifically dropped 24 percent in the state, though the Model Y retained the top seller position. Nationally, EV market share fell to a four-year low of 13.7 percent in California during Q1 2026. Hybrid vehicles have now surpassed EVs for the first time, capturing 21 percent of California's new vehicle market, with the Toyota Camry hybrid climbing to the number two best-seller position. Several factors are driving this decline. The federal used EV tax credit of up to 4,000 dollars expired on September 30, 2025, removing crucial affordability support. New EV tax credits have also ended. Additionally, used EV prices have dropped dramatically, with prices falling 30 to 40 percent on average from early 2022 through early 2025, though off-lease inventory is now flooding the market in unprecedented volumes. One quarter-million leased EVs are expected to hit the used market in 2026, more than triple the 2025 volume. Despite domestic challenges, Tesla reported beating Wall Street profit expectations in the first quarter with adjusted earnings of 41 cents per share versus the 34-cent average estimate. The company cited continued demand growth in Asia-Pacific and South America, plus a rebound in North America and Europe-…