Tesla Inc. (TSLA)'s Model Y crossover SUV held onto its title as America's best-selling electric vehicle for 2025, even as Elon Musk's company dealt with softening demand across most of its lineup. It's a win, sure, but the kind that makes you check the fine print.
The Numbers Tell a Mixed Story
New data from Cox Automotive released Tuesday shows the Model Y moved 92,460 units during the fourth quarter, bringing full-year sales to 357,528 vehicles. That's enough to claim the crown, but sales actually dropped 4% compared to 2024. The Model Y is still the king of the hill—it's just a slightly smaller hill than last year.
Things looked rougher for the Model 3 sedan. Tesla sold just 37,260 units in Q4, a sharp 35.7% decline from the 57,928 units it moved in Q4 2024. For the full year, Model 3 sales reached 192,440 units, barely eking out a 1.3% gain over 2024's total of 189,903 units.
Here's the interesting part: Tesla's EV market share actually jumped to 58.9% in Q4, with total sales hitting 589,000 units for the year. But that increase had less to do with Tesla's momentum and more to do with legacy automakers tapping the brakes on their electric ambitions. Total EV sales across the industry declined 2% to 1,275,714 units in 2025, down from 2024's 1,301,441 units. This happened despite—or perhaps because of—major policy shifts under President Donald Trump.
GM Makes Its Move
While Tesla dominated the headlines, General Motors Co. (GM) quietly put together an impressive year. The company sold more than 150,000 EVs in 2025 across its Chevrolet, Cadillac, and GMC brands, representing a 48% year-over-year surge. That performance gave GM a 13% slice of the total U.S. EV market—a meaningful foothold that suggests the Detroit giant is finding its footing in the electric transition.




