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    Australia's best-selling PHEVs in 2025 revealed

    BYD is fuelling the growth of plug-in hybrids in Australia more than any other brand, accounting for half of all PHEV sales.

    William Stopford

    William Stopford

    News Editor

    William Stopford

    William Stopford

    News Editor

    Plug-in hybrid vehicle (PHEV) sales rose sharply in Australia in 2025, despite the end of a key government incentive.

    The Fringe Benefits Tax (FBT) exemption on PHEVs ended on April 1, 2025, and yet PHEV sales were up 130.9 per cent year over year for a total of 53,484 deliveries.

    An influx of more affordable PHEV offerings, many from Chinese brands, helped fuel this growth.

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    Australia also received the first PHEV utes, with BYD, Ford and GWM pioneering a new segment Down Under that's set to get more entrants in the future.

    And it's BYD that was once again on top, holding just over a 50 per cent share of Australia's PHEV market – though PHEVs still accounted for 4.3 per cent of the total new-vehicle market.

    Models

    In 2025, the BYD Sealion 6 and Mitsubishi Outlander each took a step down on the podium to make way for a new top-selling PHEV: the BYD Shark 6.

    Not only did the BYD Shark 6 outsell the next best-selling PHEV at a rate of almost exactly two to one, but it blew its rivals – the GWM Cannon Alpha PHEV and Ford Ranger PHEV – out of the water.

    Admittedly, it had a few more months under its belt – the first deliveries of the Shark 6 were recorded in February, against April for the Ford and May for the GWM – but the BYD's dominance of the PHEV ute segment is plain to see.

    The Cannon Alpha PHEV was nevertheless Australia's fifth-best selling PHEV in 2025, just behind its showroom-mate, the Haval H6.

    Model

    PHEV sales

    Model total

    PHEV share of total sales

    BYD Shark 6

    18,073

    18,073

    100%

    BYD Sealion 6

    9055

    9055

    100%

    Mitsubishi Outlander

    4110

    22459

    18.3%

    GWM Haval H6

    2542

    13217

    19.2%

    GWM Cannon Alpha

    1371

    2524

    54.3%

    BMW X3

    1305

    4909

    26.6%

    Mitsubishi Eclipse Cross

    1297

    4477

    29.0%

    Ford Ranger 4x4

    1143

    56555

    2.1%

    Jaecoo J7

    1078

    2706

    39.8%

    Geely Starray EM-i

    1066

    1066

    100%

    Chery Tiggo 8 Pro

    1065

    3571

    29.8%

    Mazda CX-60

    1029

    5410

    19.0%

    Mazda CX-80

    971

    3851

    25.2%

    Chery Tiggo 7 Pro

    901

    5681

    15.9%

    Lexus NX

    744

    6024

    12.4%

    Kia Sorento

    600

    8745

    6.9%

    Lexus RX

    507

    2126

    23.9%

    Cupra Formentor

    468

    1490

    31.4%

    Mercedes-Benz GLC-Class Wagon

    451

    4306

    10.5%

    Omoda 9

    373

    373

    100%

    MG HS

    353

    4201

    8.4%

    Volvo XC60

    331

    2047

    16.2%

    Audi Q5

    299

    3570

    8.4%

    Mercedes-Benz C-Class

    294

    1425

    20.6%

    BMW X5

    269

    3673

    7.3%

    Volvo XC90

    265

    754

    35.2%

    Range Rover Sport

    253

    2306

    11.0%

    GWM Tank 500

    249

    1519

    16.4%

    Audi A5

    246

    979

    25.1%

    Leapmotor C10

    235

    579

    40.6%

    Mercedes-Benz GLA-Class

    218

    3244

    6.7%

    Chery Tiggo 9

    190

    190

    100.0%

    Land Rover Defender

    186

    3854

    4.8%

    Volkswagen Touareg

    183

    768

    23.8%

    BMW 5 Series

    155

    315

    49.2%

    Porsche Cayenne Wagon

    154

    662

    23.3%

    Porsche Cayenne Coupe

    148

    932

    15.9%

    Mercedes-Benz GLC-Class Coupe

    128

    1520

    8.4%

    Mercedes-Benz E-Class

    118

    519

    22.7%

    Range Rover Evoque

    111

    614

    18.1%

    BMW XM

    95

    95

    100%

    Ferrari two-door range

    89

    164

    54.3%

    Lamborghini two-door range

    76

    118

    64.4%

    Bentley two-door range

    69

    70

    98.6%

    Audi Q8

    63

    514

    12.3%

    Cupra Leon

    61

    339

    18.0%

    Jeep Grand Cherokee

    60

    673

    8.9%

    Range Rover

    53

    369

    14.4%

    Jaguar F-Pace

    50

    304

    16.5%

    Ford Transit Custom

    47

    3447

    1.4%

    Alfa Romeo Tonale

    38

    132

    28.8%

    Land Rover Discovery Sport

    37

    412

    9.0%

    Peugeot 408

    33

    93

    35.5%

    Range Rover Velar

    30

    371

    8.1%

    Jeep Compass

    28

    147

    19.1%

    McLaren Coupe/Convertible

    27

    68

    39.7%

    Ford Escape

    25

    28

    89.3%

    Porsche Panamera

    24

    82

    29.3%

    Bentley Flying Spur

    11

    12

    91.7%

    Cupra Terramar

    9

    246

    3.7%

    Skoda Kodiaq

    8

    1255

    0.6%

    Mercedes-AMG GT 4-Door Coupe

    6

    6

    100%

    Volvo S60

    4

    37

    10.8%

    Peugeot 508

    2

    2

    100%

    Bentley Bentayga

    1

    68

    1.5%

    Citroen C5 X

    1

    2

    50.0%

    Denza B5

    1

    1

    100%

    Denza B8

    1

    1

    100%

    Peugeot 308

    1

    88

    1.1%

    Brands

    BYD toppled Mitsubishi to become Australia's best-selling PHEV brand.

    It wasn't just fresh product that saw BYD overtake Mitsubishi, which had been among the first brands to offer PHEVs in Australia.

    Mitsubishi was forced to axe its Eclipse Cross, in both petrol and plug-in hybrid guise, as it was one of multiple models in its lineup that didn't meet new safety regulations. The brand secured stock of affected vehicles prior to the implementation of the new regulation from March 1, but Eclipse Cross PHEV sales still fell by 45.2 per cent.

    The Outlander PHEV, an updated version of which is due here this year, also slumped 32.9 per cent.

    Jaecoo J7 2025
    Jaecoo J7 2025

    While BYD posted an enormous increase in PHEV sales (up 337.7 per cent year over year), fuelled in large part by the arrival of the Shark 6, it wasn't the only brand to sell more PHEVs in 2025 than in the year before.

    Setting aside PHEV newcomers like GWM, Chery, Geely and Omoda Jaecoo, all of which launched their first PHEVs in Australia in 2025, there were some other notable players.

    Mazda was up 16 per cent, BMW was up 287.3 per cent, and Lexus was up 256.4 per cent on the back of better supply and the launch of the RX PHEV.

    Brand

    2025 PHEV sales

    % change vs 2024

    BYD

    27,128

    +337.7%

    Mitsubishi

    5407

    -36.3%

    GWM

    4162

    -

    Chery

    2156

    -

    Mazda

    2000

    +16.0%

    BMW

    1824

    +287.3%

    Omoda Jaecoo

    1451

    -

    Lexus

    1251

    +256.4%

    Ford

    1215

    +519.9%

    Mercedes-Benz

    1215

    +149.5%

    Geely

    1066

    -

    Land Rover

    670

    +5.7%

    Audi

    608

    +55.1%

    Kia

    600

    +391.8%

    Volvo

    600

    -51.8%

    Cupra

    538

    -24.1%

    MG

    353

    -60.0%

    Porsche

    326

    -34.7%

    Volkswagen

    183

    +21.2%

    Ferrari

    89

    -30.5%

    Jeep

    88

    +37.5%

    Bentley

    81

    +800.0%

    Lamborghini

    76

    +660.0%

    Jaguar

    50

    -

    Alfa Romeo

    38

    -67.0%

    Peugeot

    36

    -84.5%

    McLaren

    27

    -25.0%

    Skoda

    8

    -

    Denza

    2

    -

    Citroen

    1

    -50.0%

    MORE: VFACTS 2025: Another record year for new vehicle sales in Australia, but growth modest overall

    William Stopford

    William Stopford

    News Editor

    William Stopford

    News Editor

    William Stopford is an automotive journalist with a passion for mainstream cars, automotive history and overseas auto markets.

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