EV tax credits are dead in the US. Now what?
Casey Crownhart
created: Oct. 2, 2025, 10 a.m. | updated: Oct. 6, 2025, 11 a.m.
EV growth did see a longer-term backslide in Germany after the end of the subsidies.
Battery-electric vehicles made up 13.5% of new registrations in 2024, down from 18.5% the year before, and the UK also passed Germany to become Europe’s largest EV market.
According to early projections, the end of tax credits in the US could significantly slow progress on EVs and, by extension, on cutting emissions.
Sales of battery-electric vehicles could be about 40% lower in 2030 without the credits than what we’d see with them, according to one analysis by Princeton University’s Zero Lab.
But without federal support, the US is likely to continue lagging behind global EV leaders like China.
2 months, 1 week ago: MIT Technology Review