BYD’s EV sales drop for an eighth month in prolonged slowdown

BYD sales fall

BYD has entered its most prolonged slowdown on record, with April 2026 marking the eighth consecutive month of falling electric‑vehicle sales.

China’s EV champion BYD is facing a decisive shift in its growth story. The company reported 314,100 passenger‑vehicle sales in April, a 15.7% year‑on‑year decline, extending a downturn that has now lasted eight months — the longest in its history.

Weak demand

Although sales ticked up slightly from March 2026, the broader trend is unmistakable: domestic demand is weakening, and the once‑relentless rise of China’s largest EV maker has stalled.

The slowdown reflects the brutal reality of China’s EV market. A wave of new models, aggressive discounting, and rapid innovation from rivals such as Leapmotor, Zeekr, Geely and Xiaomi has intensified competition.

BYD’s core Dynasty and Ocean series — the backbone of its domestic volume — fell 21.2% year‑on‑year, signalling pressure at the heart of its line‑up.

Niche brands mixed

Meanwhile, premium and niche brands delivered a mixed performance: Fang Cheng Bao surged 190%, while Denza dropped 26.9%, and ultra‑luxury Yangwang grew from a small base.

Yet the picture is not uniformly bleak. Overseas sales are booming, hitting a record 134,542 vehicles in April, up 70.9% from a year earlier.

Exports now account for over 42% of BYD’s monthly volume, underscoring a strategic pivot toward global markets as China’s price war erodes margins at home.

From January to April 2026, international sales rose nearly 60%, even as total global volume fell. BYD is targeting 1.5 million overseas sales in 2026, a goal that now looks central to its future.

Profit plunge

Financially, the strain is clear. BYD’s Q1 profit plunged 55%, with revenue down nearly 12% as domestic competition intensified and hardware costs rose.

The company is responding with faster‑charging battery technology, expanded model launches, and a global manufacturing push spanning Brazil, Indonesia, Hungary and Malaysia.

The story of BYD in 2026 is one of divergence: a weakening home market colliding with accelerating global expansion.

The question now is whether overseas momentum can scale fast enough to counter China’s slowdown.