Tesla Continues To Struggle In 2025

Tesla’s sales story in 2025 is a study in contrasts: the company still moves large volumes globally, but in Europe its momentum has stalled — and three forces seem to be combining to make the slowdown worse: the public political profile of CEO Elon Musk, a product cadence that has left some buyers waiting, and an aggressive push by Chinese EV manufacturers into European showrooms.

On the numbers, Tesla remains a major global producer — the company reported delivering roughly 384,000 vehicles in Q2 2025 which is a 13% drop compared to Q2 last year — and regional performance in Europe has weakened repeatedly this year. European registrations plunged in several months and markets, with ACEA and Reuters data showing double-digit drops in Tesla new-car sales even as overall EV registrations in the region rose. 

Musk has alienated many European buyers

A straightforward explanation often offered by analysts is that Elon Musk’s increasingly visible political interventions have alienated many European buyers. Headlines and industry commentary through 2025 pointed to a measurable backlash after Musk’s public comments and political alignments, and several outlets linked falls in Tesla registrations in January–April directly to buyer unease. While some experts caution it’s hard to isolate one driver among many, consumer surveys and press coverage show that brand sentiment in parts of Europe has softened. 

A second factor is product timing. Tesla’s Model Y, historically its best seller, has been in transition — the promise of a revised model and other product updates encouraged some potential customers to postpone purchases, weakening near-term order flow. At the same time, rivals are not standing still: legacy automakers and newcomers alike are launching fresh EVs with competitive ranges, tech and pricing, giving fence-sitters more attractive alternatives. Tesla’s steady global production figures mask these regional timing effects. 

The third and perhaps most structural pressure comes from China. Chinese brands such as BYD, Xpeng and MG have recorded rapid year-on-year gains in Europe: BYD’s European sales grew dramatically in early 2025; JATO and industry trackers reported Chinese brands roughly doubling market share in some months and gaining traction through aggressive pricing, localized sales networks and models tailored to European buyers. This inflow has intensified competition in the mass-market EV segments where Tesla once had fewer challengers. 

What does this add up to? For Tesla, the picture is not existential — global deliveries are still large and the company retains strong brand recognition — but the European market now looks far weaker and more contested. The company’s next moves will matter: more frequent product refreshes, clearer separation between corporate political signaling and the consumer brand, and competitive pricing or localized offers could blunt the current slide. Meanwhile, the steady rise of Chinese automakers in Europe suggests that competition will only intensify, forcing Tesla to treat the continent not as a captive market but as one where winning requires sharper commercial focus and sensitivity to consumer sentiment.

CARLIST THOUGHTS
In short, Europe’s recent turn away from Tesla is the product of politics, product timing and new rivals — a reminder that even dominant players must keep evolving on multiple fronts to stay ahead.

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