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UK market for new vehicles stalls as 2024 ends

6th January 2025

Ford Puma ST Ecoboost – UK’s best-selling car in 2024.

Private UK buyers shunned BEV models in 2024 while fleet sales increased in this sector…

by Robin Roberts (and WheelsWithinWales).

Britain’s petrol, electric car and van markets have stalled with dealers reporting contracting business in the last quarter.

The very slight increase in total registrations for the whole of 2024 came about with fleets being given big discounts by manufacturers very anxious to move the metal and push EV sales or face huge penalties from the UK Government.

The UK new car market recorded its second successive year of growth with 1,952,778 new cars reaching the road in 2024 – a rise of 2.6% on the previous year, according to the latest figures from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders.

In the final month of the year, the market remained flat at 140,786 units, a marginal -0.2% decline, capping off a challenging year for the sector as manufacturers strove to create demand for electric vehicles in a bid to meet new mandated sales targets.

Over the full year, growth was delivered entirely by fleets, up 11.8% to reach 1,163,855 units, accounting for a record six in 10 (59.6%) new car registrations. Conversely, registrations by private buyers fell by -8.7% to 746,276 units – less than in 2020 when social distancing restrictions during the pandemic shut down the market for three months.1 The far smaller business sector saw uptake fall by -3.1% to 42,647 units.

The first year of mandated targets for new zero emission vehicles finished with another strong December performance, with 43,656 new battery electric vehicle (BEV) registrations accounting for 31.0% of the market – the highest since December 2022’s record 32.9%. As a result, BEVs made up 19.6% of the market (381,970 units) in 2024, up by more than a fifth (67,283 units) from last year, but short of the 22% demanded by the mandate.

Industry has pulled every lever to try and achieve this target, with manufacturer discounting totalling more than £4.5 billion in 2024, an amount that is not sustainable in the long term.

Billions of pounds of investment in new technologies and products over the past decade have delivered a record 132 ZEV models to the UK market, up 38% since 2023 to account for a third of all models available, with an average range of almost 280 miles – more than two weeks’ of driving for most people.

One of the major constraints to growth, however, has been lacklustre demand by private buyers, with only one in 10 choosing an EV in 2024.

Petrol remained the most popular powertrain among these buyers, commanding 61.0% of demand, with hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs) in second place (16.0%).

Conversely, around 64,000 more BEVs were registered by businesses and fleets than a year ago, with such vehicles representing a quarter (25.4%) of those segments’ registrations and demonstrating the effectiveness of the compelling tax incentives afforded non-private buyers.

Across the total market, pure petrol and diesel car registrations fell by -4.4% and -13.6% respectively as more buyers swapped either to BEVs, or to lower emission hybrid electric vehicles (up 9.6%) and plug-in hybrids (up 18.3%).

Consequently, average new car CO2 has fallen by -6.2% to 102.1g/km. While this will assist some manufacturers with mandate compliance, the extent to which it will help will remain unclear until confirmed baseline CO2 figures are provided by government. Meeting the mandate thresholds in 2025 will be even more intense as the target is now 28% – requiring an EV market uplift of just under 50%.

Action is needed now to amend the regulation to reflect the reality of a constrained market and ZEV demand failing to grow in line with expectations.

When the previous government drew up plans for a mandate the 2024 BEV market was forecast to be almost 20% – or some 75,000 units – larger than has eventuated.

With manufacturer support at record but unsustainable levels, government must do more to stimulate private demand and challenge chargepoint operators to accelerate rollout, ensuring the UK has a reliable, affordable and comprehensive nationwide network of infrastructure that dispels any doubts potential EV buyers may harbour so ever more drivers will make the switch.

Mike Hawes, SMMT Chief Executive, said, “A record year for EV registrations underscores vehicle manufacturers’ unswerving commitment to a decarbonised new car market, with more choice, better range and increased affordability than ever before.

This has come at huge cost, however, with the billions invested in new models being supplemented by generous incentives which are unsustainable.

We need rapid results from the regulatory review and urgent substantive support for consumers – else automotive investments will be at risk and the jobs, economic growth and net zero ambitions we all share will be in jeopardy.”

There was little cheer about in the electric van market as registrations were virtually static with just a 3% rise to 351,834 units and 4×4 and pickups were particularly badly hit as tax hikes loom and it seems businesses are turning their backs on electric models taking just 6.3%, almost the same as 2023.

In the UK as a whole the top ten for 2024 were:

Ford Puma, Kia Sportage, Nissan Qashqai, Nissan Juke, Tesla Model Y, VW Golf, Hyundai Tucson, MG HS, Volvo XC40 and VW Polo.

The top EVs were: Tesla Model Y (pictured below), Audi Q4 e-tron, Tesla Model 3, MG4, BMW i4, MB EQA, Skoda Enyaq, Hyundai Kona, Volvo EX30 and VW ID.4.

Tesla Model Y.
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Categories: News & Views, Robin Roberts Tags: UK new car market

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