Manufacturer and dealer incentives meant the UK’s new car market grew for the second consecutive month in June, as registrations rose 6.7% to 191,316 units, according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders.
It was the best June since 2019, helping lift first half performance 3.5% above the same period last year, although the market remains -17.9% behind pre-Covid levels. In Wales, 5,818 new cars were registered last month a drop of 4.17%.
Despite a positive June performance, it too remained behind pre-pandemic levels, -14.4% lower than in 2019, and driven mostly by fleet activity with uptake climbing 8.5% to 114,841 units.
Private retail demand grew 5.9% to 71,616 units but still accounted for just less than four in 10 new cars registered (37.4%) while business registrations fell -15.8% to 4,859 units indicating a concern over over borrowing and Government plans.
New petrol registrations declined -4.2% and diesel volumes were flat (+0.2%), meaning their combined share of the market is now just over half (51.6%), with total electrified vehicle registrations (92,571) achieving a 48.5% market share.
Registrations of vehicles with plugs rose strongly as battery electric vehicles (BEVs) jumped 39.1% to 47,354 units, equivalent to a quarter (24.8%) of the market, and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs) grew 28.8% to 21,382 units. The market for new hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs), meanwhile, fell by -8.5% to 23,835 registrations.
Across the first six months of 2025 new BEV registrations have risen 34.6% to 224,841 units but, at 21.6% market share, they remain significantly behind the 28% mandated for this year. Moreover, achieving even this level of market penetration has required discounts totalling £6.5 billion over the last 18 months.
In a recent survey of automotive CEOs carried out for SMMT’s new Automotive Business Leaders Barometer, more than half (55%) said they believe the UK is significantly behind plan to meet the 2030 end of sale date for new cars powered solely by combustion engines.
A lack of governmental purchase and charging incentives, combined with fiscal disincentives such as the newly applied VED Expensive Car Supplement (ECS), which is estimated to impose an effective fine of more than £360 million on BEVs bought from April in this year alone, are acting as a brake on BEV demand.
Industry bosses have reaffirmed this, citing fiscal incentives for private BEV sales as the biggest single action needed to boost BEV demand, economic growth and the UK’s automotive manufacturing base – a key objective of government’s new Industrial Strategy.
Amending the ECS to remove the majority of BEVs from its scope and cutting VAT on new BEVs and public charging would significantly boost demand.