European light vehicle production and sales decouple as Chinese imports take off

Despite the trials and tribulations of recent years, European Light Vehicle (LV) sales and production have largely shared the same fate, with both contracting by a CAGR of 3.8% and 4%, respectively, in 2019-23. However, since then, the relationship has started to diverge, with regional output declining by 3.9% in 2024 and 1.5% in 2025,…


European light vehicle production and sales decouple as Chinese imports take off
European light vehicle production and sales decouple as Chinese imports take off

Despite the trials and tribulations of recent years, European Light Vehicle (LV) sales and production have largely shared the same fate, with both contracting by a CAGR of 3.8% and 4%, respectively, in 2019-23. However, since then, the relationship has started to diverge, with regional output declining by 3.9% in 2024 and 1.5% in 2025, while sales increased by 4.6% in 2024 and 0.6% in 2025. This divergence implies that European automakers can no longer rely on expanding domestic demand to drive output growth. This trend is further highlighted by the shrinking share of European sales serviced by European-built models, which fell from 87% in 2019 to 78% in 2025, as imports capture a larger portion of the market.

Source: GlobalData
Source: GlobalData

But is that the only factor at play? The chart above shows sales by origin as a proxy for European imports and exports: regional sales of European-built models are in blue, while the off-white line tracks sales of European-built vehicles outside of Europe. Taken together, the data suggests that the decoupling of sales and production is being driven by skyrocketing imports and stagnating exports.

Since Europe became a net importer of vehicles in 2021, the import-export balance has deteriorated sharply, reaching a deficit of 1.6 million units in 2025. This gap is projected to widen further over the next few years, expanding to 2.3 million units by 2030. This raises two obvious questions: where are these imports coming from, and why have exports stalled?

Source: GlobalData
Source: GlobalData

The answer up until 2025 is almost exclusively Chinaโ€”despite the EU raising import tariffs on Chinese Battery Electric Vehicles (BEVs) to 17.8-45.3% (depending on OEM) from November 2024. In fact, the tariffs have not stemmed the influx of Chinese-made vehicles but have simply changed the mix of powertrains that are being imported, with Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicles (PHEVs) being instrumental in Chinese import growth. It is also no coincidence that 87% of Chinese-built models sold in Europe in 2025 fell into the Economy segment. After years of portfolio consolidation, European automakers have increasingly moved away from low-cost domestic offerings toward higher-margin vehicle segments, leaving a gap that Chinese imports are well positioned to fill.

Overall, competition from Chinaโ€”across both Western and Chinese OEMs producing thereโ€”remains high. In 2025, 1.37 million vehicles sold in Europe originated in China, a figure that is set to rise to 1.53 million units by 2030. This will cement Chinaโ€™s position as Europeโ€™s largest single source of imported vehicles by far, even as a sizable proportion of Chinese manufacturing transfers to Europe. It is important to note that not all European markets are bound by EU tariff policy: the UK and Russia, for example, are under no obligation to adopt EU measures. Indeed, in the UK alone, roughly 290k vehicles, or 12.4% of total sales, originated in China in 2025.

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