Sales of Tesla's China-made electric vehicle rose by nearly 40% in May amid a broader recovery in the country's EV market.
The automaker in May delivered 85,982 new energy vehicle units from its Shanghai Gigafactory — where it produces Model 3 and Model Y units for China and several overseas markets — according to preliminary data published Tuesday by the China Passenger Car Association. That's a 39.4% year-on-year increase over the same period in 2025.
In total, 1.36 million passenger EVs were sold across China's domestic EV manufacturers in May, a 12% growth year-on-year, and 11% higher than April's total, according to the CPCA's report. These figures indicate "an initial recovery" in China's EV market, the CPCA said, as sales from several other Chinese EV automakers grew modestly in the month.
Tesla rival BYD halted an eight-month streak of declining sales volumes in May, posting 376,990 deliveries of its new energy passenger vehicles — a category which includes both battery electric and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles — a 0.02% increase over the 376,930 units delivered last May.
Figures from Stellantis-backed Leapmotor and Geely's Zeekr both surged by more than 80% in May. After releasing its first flagship EV in over two years, Nio saw a 62.3% year-on-year increase.
Xiaomi reported more than 30,000 EV deliveries in May, a 7.1% year-on-year increase. The tech giant launched its YU7 GT SUV — a performance-focused variant of its popular YU7 SUV — which reportedly set a lap record at the Nürburgring racetrack in Germany, making it the fastest production SUV.
A handful of Chinese automakers also reported year-on-year declines in sales — 18.4% for Li Auto, and 4.1% for XPeng.