Rivian Automotive Inc. (RIVN) shares were trading up Friday after the electric vehicle maker released its fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 production and delivery numbers. It's not exactly a victory lap, but in this EV market, investors seem relieved to have concrete data to work with.
Here's what the numbers look like: Rivian delivered 9,745 vehicles in the fourth quarter and produced 10,974 at its Normal, Illinois facility. That's a 26.2% drop from the 13,201 units delivered in the third quarter, which tells you something about how demand shaped up as the year closed out.
For the full year, Rivian produced 42,284 vehicles and delivered 42,247 units. That represents roughly an 18% year-over-year decline from the 51,579 deliveries in 2024. Not great, but also not unexpected given what's been happening across the EV industry.
The company also confirmed it will report fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 financial results on February 12, 2026, complete with an investor webcast. That's when we'll get the real story on margins, cost discipline, and what management is planning for 2026.
Why This Matters Beyond Just Rivian
Rivian's 2025 performance isn't happening in a vacuum. The broader EV industry has been dealing with some tough realities: shifting incentive structures, pricing pressure, and what you might politely call demand normalization after several years of explosive growth. Translation: the easy growth phase is over.
The company has been emphasizing cost discipline while talking up future product catalysts, particularly its upcoming R2 platform. Whether that's enough to reignite growth remains the big question mark heading into 2026.
What's Happening With Other EV Makers
Rivian's update arrived alongside mixed signals from EV peers. Tesla Inc. (TSLA) continues to dominate on volume but is facing its own growth slowdown. Meanwhile, Lucid Group Inc. (LCID) has been working through its own production and demand challenges.
The broader pattern here is clear: the EV market is recalibrating. After years of "up and to the right" growth expectations, companies are now dealing with a more complex reality involving actual profitability, sustainable demand, and competitive pressure.
What Comes Next
With production and delivery numbers now on the table, investor attention shifts squarely to that February earnings report. That's when we'll find out how Rivian's margins held up, what progress the company made on cost controls, and what priorities management is setting for 2026.
The big question: can Rivian stabilize demand and move toward profitability in what's shaping up to be a tougher EV environment? The delivery numbers give us one piece of the puzzle. The financial results will fill in the rest.
RIVN Price Action: Rivian Automotive shares were down 1.95% at $19.32 at the time of publication on Friday, according to market data.




