Top 20 registred Electrical Vehicles

Here’s the most complete public Q1-2025 model-level view I can pin down. Numbers are Europe-28 (EU+EFTA+UK) as tracked by JATO, compiled from outlets that publish JATO’s quarterly model table.
In som cases, if poosible, multiple sources is mentioned .

RankModelQ1 2025 registrations
1Tesla Model Y29,770. (Carscoops, citaevcharger.co.uk)
2Tesla Model 323,044. (Carscoops, citaevcharger.co.uk)
3Volkswagen ID.421,025. (BI also says ~2k behind Model 3.) (citaevcharger.co.uk, Business Insider)
4Volkswagen ID.718,770. (citaevcharger.co.uk)
5Kia EV318,484. (citaevcharger.co.uk)
6Renault 5 (E-Tech)16,948. (citaevcharger.co.uk)
7Škoda Enyaq17,197. (citaevcharger.co.uk)
8Volkswagen ID.317,223. (citaevcharger.co.uk)
9BMW iX114,397. (citaevcharger.co.uk)
10Audi Q6 e-tron12,311. (citaevcharger.co.uk)
11Audi Q4 e-tron11,667. (citaevcharger.co.uk)
12BMW i412,160. (citaevcharger.co.uk)
13Škoda ElroqQ1 figure not publicly stated (CITA cites 4,580 in March only). (citaevcharger.co.uk)
14Mercedes-Benz EQA10,790. (citaevcharger.co.uk)
15Renault Scenic E-Tech9,793. (citaevcharger.co.uk)
16Volvo EX3011,720. (citaevcharger.co.uk)
17Citroën ë-C312,381. (citaevcharger.co.uk)
18Mercedes-Benz EQB8,466. (citaevcharger.co.uk)
19Ford Explorer EVQ1 figure not publicly stated (CITA cites 3,903 in March only). (citaevcharger.co.uk)
20Cupra Born11,045. (citaevcharger.co.uk)

Notes & provenance

  • JATO’s Q1 2025 Europe EV roundup confirms the quarter total and that Model Y #1, Model 3 #2, with ID.4 #3 (≈2,000 behind Model 3). (best-selling-cars.com, Business Insider)
  • CarScoops explicitly prints the Model Y (29,770) and Model 3 (23,044) Q1 figures from JATO. (Carscoops)
  • The detailed per-model counts beyond the top few are republished (with Q1 numbers) by CITA EV Charger’s digest; this aligns with the JATO narrative and fills in the rest of the top-20 where mainstream outlets don’t print the full table. Where their article only shows a March number (Škoda Elroq, Ford Explorer EV), I’ve labeled those as such instead of presenting them as Q1. (citaevcharger.co.uk)

🚗 Registered cars

  • Definition: When a vehicle is officially entered into a country’s vehicle registry and given a license plate.
  • Who reports: National registration authorities (e.g. KBA in Germany, DVLA in the UK, Trafikverket in Sweden).
  • What it means: The car is now legally allowed on the road.
  • Timing: Registration usually happens when a customer (or fleet) takes delivery, but it can also happen in special cases (see below).
  • Why analysts use it: Registration data is standardized, public, and consistent across Europe.

💰 Sold cars

  • Definition: A commercial transaction — when a customer pays for (or leases) a car.
  • Who knows: Only the car manufacturer and its dealer network.
  • What it means: Reflects actual demand.
  • Timing: A car can be sold before it is registered (e.g. pre-orders, fleet deals).

⚠️ Key Differences

  1. Dealer Stocking / Pre-registration:
    • Dealers sometimes “register” cars to hit targets (called tactical registrations).
    • Those cars show up in registration statistics, even though no end customer has bought them yet.
  2. Export / Re-registration:
    • A car might be registered in one EU country and later exported/re-registered in another. That inflates stats.
  3. Timing gap:
    • A car can be sold in March but not registered until April (delays in delivery, logistics, paperwork).

✅ Why this matters for EVs

  • Tesla reports deliveries (sold cars) globally every quarter. But in Europe, JATO, ACEA, and others only track registrations.
  • For most brands, “sold” data is not public — they only release registrations, because that’s what authorities track.
  • So analysts (and the media) use registrations as a proxy for sales in Europe, even though the numbers aren’t 100% the same.