435,000 of those exports were new energy vehicles—more than half the total and more than double a year earlier—as higher gasoline and diesel prices boosted overseas interest in EVs.
1.44 million passenger cars were sold domestically in May, down 23.4% for a seventh straight year-on-year decline, while internal-combustion vehicle sales dropped nearly 42% as EV share kept rising.
BYD sold more than 160,000 vehicles abroad in May, up 80%, as Chinese automakers push into Latin America, Asia and Europe to offset weaker home demand and thin margins from China’s price war.
UBS expects China’s passenger car exports to rise about 40% in 2026, with EV exports up about 80%, while S&P Global Ratings forecasts overall export growth of 30% to 50%.
As Chinese EV exports surge, can automakers survive currency risks and a collapsing domestic market to win globally?
Facing Western tariffs, will China's EV dominance create a new, divided global auto market?
China's Electric Vehicle Export Explosion in 2026: Oil Shock, Geopolitics, and the Race for Global Market Share
Overview
In May 2026, China’s export sector saw a remarkable surge, mainly driven by strong overseas demand that helped balance domestic economic weaknesses. This boom was especially notable in the New Energy Vehicle (NEV) segment, as the Iran war triggered a global oil shock, causing severe supply disruptions and record oil inventory depletion. The resulting energy crisis shifted global consumer preferences toward electric vehicles, particularly in Europe, where Chinese NEV manufacturers capitalized on their technological strengths. This combination of geopolitical tensions, energy shortages, and China’s advanced NEV capabilities created an unprecedented export boom for the country.