For the first time in modern Chinese auto history, not a single gasoline-powered car made the monthly top 10 sales list.
For the first time in modern Chinese auto history, not a single gasoline-powered car made the monthly top 10 sales list.

For the first time in modern Chinese auto history, not a single gasoline-powered car made the monthly top 10 sales list.
In May 2026, all 10 best-selling passenger cars in China were new energy vehicles, marking the first time gasoline models have been completely shut out of the monthly top 10. The shift took just 150 days — from 7 gasoline cars in January to zero in May.
"The penetration rate of new energy vehicles in China has exceeded 50% of new passenger car sales, and we expect it to approach 80% very quickly," Stella Li, executive vice president at BYD, told CNBC. BYD is the country's largest EV maker.
Geely's Staryun micro EV topped the chart with 38,751 units sold, followed by Tesla's Model Y at 28,911 units. Xiaomi's SU7 ranked third, with Leapmotor's A10 and Li Auto's i6 rounding out the top five. The Chinese Passenger Car Association reported that gasoline car sales plunged 39% in May from a year earlier, while NEV penetration hit a record 62.9% in April.
The structural shift threatens billions in revenue for legacy automakers — Volkswagen, Toyota, Honda and General Motors — that still rely on China合资 brand sales for a significant portion of global profits. For Chinese EV makers and Tesla, the data reinforces a secular growth narrative that is already reshaping global supply chains from lithium refining to chip design.
The 150-Day Collapse of Gasoline's Dominance
The speed of the transition has surprised even industry veterans. In January, gasoline cars held 7 of the top 10 slots, led by familiar合资 brand sedans and SUVs that had dominated China's mass market for decades. By March, that number had fallen to 5 as a wave of price cuts from BYD and other EV makers compressed the cost advantage of internal combustion engines. In April, only Geely's Bin Yue remained as a gasoline holdout. By May, it too was gone.
The pricing dynamic was the primary driver. Plug-in hybrid and extended-range EV models have reached price parity with comparable gasoline cars on upfront purchase cost, while offering dramatically lower fuel and maintenance expenses. Combined with rising oil prices linked to the Iran conflict — which pushed gasoline costs higher — the economic calculus shifted decisively in favor of electrification.
Who Wins, Who Loses
For Chinese EV makers, the data reflects a decade of policy support and capital investment. BYD, which sold nearly three times more NEVs than its nearest domestic rival in May, is the clearest beneficiary. The company's fast-charging technology — capable of achieving a 70% charge in five minutes — has driven domestic demand to roughly double its current production capacity, according to Li.
Tesla, despite a year-to-date decline of about 8% in China retail sales through May, held its position at No. 2 with the Model Y. The company's May retail sales of 47,281 units rose 22.5% from a year earlier, snapping a two-month streak of declines, though analysts caution that zero-interest financing promotions may have pulled demand forward.
For legacy automakers, the implications are stark. Volkswagen and Toyota each derive roughly a third of global profits from China, according to Bernstein estimates. With gasoline models losing their position in the mass market, these companies face an accelerated timeline for restructuring their China operations — including deeper discounts, potential plant closures, and impairment charges on legacy internal combustion engine assets.
The Investment Angle
The top 10 milestone is a signal, not a terminal event. Gasoline cars will retain a meaningful role in China's vast interior, where charging infrastructure remains sparse, and in cold-climate regions where battery performance degrades. But the direction of travel is unambiguous: the mainstream consumer mindshare has shifted.
For investors, the key question is whether the market has priced in the speed of this transition. BYD trades at roughly 20 times forward earnings, according to Bloomberg data, a premium to traditional automakers but a discount to high-growth tech peers. Tesla's valuation — at about 360 times trailing earnings — already embeds years of autonomous driving upside, making it more sensitive to any sign of demand weakness in China.
The next battleground, as BYD's Li noted, will be driver-assist technology. BYD recently expanded insurance coverage for its L2+ system and unveiled its own driver-assist chip, shifting the competitive focus from powertrain to software.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.