For most of the last five years, the story around electric vehicles in the United States was one of steady, if bumpy, growth. Every quarter brought a new sales record somewhere, a new cheaper model, a new automaker promising that the gas engine’s days were numbered. 2026 was supposed to keep that momentum going. Instead, it opened with something closer to a hangover.
The trigger was simple and long expected: the federal $7,500 tax credit for new EV purchases expired on September 30, 2025. What followed was not a soft landing but a genuine shock to the system, one that is still rippling through showrooms, balance sheets, and used car lots months later.
The Sales Cliff
The numbers from late 2025 are stark. EV sales fell nearly 49 percent month over month in October as buyers who had rushed to beat the deadline left a hole in demand right behind them. General Motors reported a 42 percent drop in EV sales for the fourth quarter. Analysts at BloombergNEF had expected plug-in vehicle sales to fall around 24 percent year over year in the same quarter, and even that estimate looks close to the mark once the dust settled. For non-Tesla automakers specifically, EV sales were roughly cut in half within just three months of the credit disappearing.
None of this should have been a total surprise. The credit had been propping up affordability for years, effectively knocking thousands of dollars off the sticker price of everything from a Chevrolet Equinox EV to a Hyundai Ioniq 5. Remove it overnight and you remove the reason a lot of undecided buyers finally pulled the trigger. Tesla itself had been bracing for this months in advance, rolling out cheaper standard-range trims of the Model 3 and Model Y specifically because it knew the subsidy’s expiration would take a bite out of demand.
Automakers Scramble, Then Get Caught
The first instinct at several automakers was to find a workaround rather than accept the hit. Ford and GM both experimented with a leasing structure in which their financing arms, Ford Credit and GM Financial, would purchase vehicles from dealers, claim the commercial EV tax credit that technically still applied to leased vehicles, and then pass that value on to customers as a lease discount. It was legal, and for a few weeks it worked exactly as intended.
It also drew immediate political fire. Lawmakers accused both companies of using a loophole to keep a credit alive that Congress had specifically voted to end. Facing that scrutiny, GM backed off the plan first, and Ford followed within days. The result for consumers was fewer headline grabbing lease deals just as winter buying season got underway, and a clearer signal that Washington was not going to tolerate creative accounting around the credit’s expiration.
Other automakers took a more direct route: just cut the price. Hyundai slashed the sticker on the 2026 Ioniq 5 by close to $10,000, a discount large enough to nearly replace the lost federal credit on its own. It also kept a separate $7,500 cash incentive running on leftover 2025 models to clear inventory. Hyundai has leaned hard into flexible, AI-driven manufacturing at its Georgia Metaplant specifically so it can adjust production mix quickly when demand shifts like this, and the Ioniq 5 price cut is a real world test of whether that flexibility pays off.
GM, meanwhile, took the more painful route of admitting the retreat outright. In January 2026 the company booked another $6 billion writedown tied to scaling back its EV investment plans, on top of similar charges the year before. That is not a company adjusting at the margins. That is a company acknowledging that its EV bet, at least on the current timeline, is not paying off the way it hoped.
The Price Paradox
Here is where the story gets counterintuitive. Even as automakers cut sticker prices and demand fell, the average amount people actually paid for an EV went up. According to Edmunds, the average EV transaction price climbed to $65,021 in October, up from $60,167 the month before, with average MSRP hitting $67,835, among the highest levels in recent memory.
The explanation is not that EVs got more expensive to build. It is that the buyers still purchasing EVs without a subsidy skew toward the higher end of the market. Budget conscious shoppers who needed that $7,500 to make the math work simply stepped out of the EV market entirely, at least for now, leaving a customer base weighted more heavily toward premium trims and well off buyers. The average price went up precisely because the affordable end of the market got squeezed out.
Depreciation Adds to the Headache
Buyers thinking about an EV in 2026 are not just weighing the purchase price. They are increasingly worried about what the vehicle will be worth in three or four years, and the data here is not encouraging. EVs are still losing value faster than comparable gas powered vehicles, typically shedding 40 to 55 percent of their value over three years compared to 35 to 45 percent for a similar combustion vehicle. Electric trucks have it worse: some models depreciate at roughly twice the rate of a comparable gas powered F-150.
Batteries are the root cause. A used EV is really a bet on the battery pack underneath it, and shoppers know it. Most packs lose 2 to 3 percent of their capacity a year under normal use, which is fine when a car is still sitting at 90 to 95 percent of its original range. Once that number drops toward 75 to 80 percent, resale values take a real hit, and there is still no industry standard, trusted way for a private buyer to check battery health the way they would check an odometer.
A Skeptical Buyer Base
None of this is happening in a vacuum of consumer enthusiasm that automakers can simply wait out. A recent Deloitte survey found that only 7 percent of Americans want their next vehicle to be fully electric, with 61 percent saying they would rather stick with a traditional combustion engine. Affordability, charging access, and simple habit all show up as reasons in that survey, and none of them are solved by a temporary price cut. They are solved by years of infrastructure investment and a genuine narrowing of the price gap with gas cars, neither of which happens overnight.
So Is This the End, or Just a Correction?
It depends who you ask. Some analysts frame 2026 as a necessary correction after two years of subsidy driven whiplash in both directions, first a rush to buy before the credit disappeared, then a comedown once it did. Under that reading, the market is simply resetting to a size that reflects genuine, unsubsidized demand, and from here growth should look slower but more durable.
Others point to what is happening outside the United States as the more telling comparison. Even as American EV sales stumble, adoption in China and much of Europe keeps climbing, suggesting the American slowdown has more to do with the sudden removal of a specific policy lever than with any global cooling on electric vehicles as a technology. If that view holds, 2026 will look less like the end of the EV transition in America and more like the year the industry learned it had been leaning on a subsidy crutch far more than anyone wanted to admit.
Either way, the next twelve months will say a lot. Automakers now have to sell EVs on their actual merits, price, range, charging speed, resale value, without a federal check smoothing over the rough edges. That is a harder sales pitch. It might also, eventually, be a more honest one.

