
The European continent is teeming with EVs, and it’s never been easier to own and charge one. But everything is under China's shadow.
More people are choosing to go electric in Europe—not necessarily because they care about the environment, but because it makes sense to do so, and it brings little compromise. Even in 2025, a year marked by the pullback of incentives and slower demand growth, the continent's EV sales rose.
But countless challenges lie ahead for the likes of Volkswagen, BMW, Renault and beyond. From Chinese competition to a charging arms race, here's what defined Europe's 2025 in the electric vehicle world—and what to expect in 2026 and beyond.
Charging Got Way Easier
The expansion of public charging networks has made it remarkably easy to find an available, working charger. It's so much easier to charge today than it was even three years ago and the numbers back this up.
The European Commission reports that there are now more than 1 million chargers in the European Union. The statistic doesn't include Switzerland and Norway, which aren't part of the EU, but they do have expansive public and private charging networks.
EAFO data reveals that the outright leader is the Netherlands, which has almost 200,000 public chargers, more per capita than any other country in Europe, although most of them are low-power AC chargers. Norway, the world EV adoption leader, has around 30,000 stalls (around a third of which are DC fast chargers).
When I drove EVs across Europe earlier this year, I found that it wasn’t much more difficult than driving a combustion car, especially if you drive an 800-volt EV that only requires 20 minutes for an 80% top-up.
Europe’s EV Incentive Pullback
Even though many European countries shrunk or eliminated EV incentives, subsidies and tax advantages, Europeans still bought 33% more plug-in vehicles through November of this year compared to 2024, according to a report published by Benchmark Mineral Intelligence, which includes the European Union, Switzerland, Norway and the United Kingdom.
The report estimates sales growth for plug-in vehicles in China at 19%, equating to over 11.6 million vehicles, compared with Europe’s 3.8 million.
The European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association (ACEA), which covers only the European Union, reported that pure electric vehicles accounted for 16.9% of all new vehicle purchases in the EU from January through November, up from 13.4% during the same period in 2024. That’s 1.66 million new EVs, mainly concentrated in Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands and France.
latest_posts
- 1
Instructions to Decide whether a Fender bender Legal counselor is Required for Your Particular Case - 2
Air superiority and long-range strikes: what China's war games say about how it might assault Taiwan - 3
Well informed: How to Take full advantage of Your Gadgets - 4
Germany's Lufthansa enters race for stake in Portuguese airline TAP - 5
Aspirin can prevent a serious pregnancy complication — but too few women get it, new report suggests
Astronomers detect black hole blasting winds at incredible speeds
Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket landed its booster on a barge at sea – an achievement that will broaden the commercial spaceflight market
Barry Manilow to have surgery for early-stage lung cancer and postpones January concerts
Instructions to Back Your Sunlight powered chargers: Tracking down Possible Choices
Russia confirms 16 Cameroonian soldiers killed in Ukraine war
4 astronauts depart ISS, leaving behind just 3 crewmates to staff the orbiting lab
Thousands of New York City nurses set to strike Monday if deal isn't reached with hospitals
Triple polar vortex to plunge central and eastern U.S. into Arctic cold through mid-December
Damaged Shenzhou-20 spacecraft to return to Earth uncrewed for inspection












