VW, Toyota, Hyundai tap Chinese tech as local brands hold 70% market share

▼ Summary
– Foreign automakers briefly regained market share in early 2026 due to the expiration of Chinese EV subsidies, which temporarily reduced domestic sales, but Chinese brands still hold nearly 70% of the passenger vehicle market.
– Chinese new energy vehicle (NEV) penetration is expected to exceed 54% in 2026, with domestic brands commanding over 85% of the NEV segment, while foreign brands struggle to maintain their shrinking share.
– Foreign automakers like Volkswagen and Hyundai are partnering with Chinese AI and autonomous driving companies, such as XPeng and Momenta, because they cannot develop competitive software quickly enough on their own.
– Toyota and GM were exceptions, with Toyota growing slightly in 2025 via a $15,000 EV and hybrid lineup, and GM seeing a 2.3% sales increase, though analysts note GM is “surviving rather than thriving.”
– Chinese domestic brands, led by BYD, Geely, and Xiaomi, dominate with software-driven advantages, supported by a local ecosystem of chip designers, AI providers, and battery supply chains, challenging foreign automakers’ legacy five-year development cycles.
In early 2026, foreign automakers briefly regained some ground in China’s passenger vehicle market after the expiration of EV subsidies caused a dip in domestic sales. However, the underlying trend remains clear: Chinese brands now command nearly 70% of the market, new energy vehicle (NEV) penetration is on track to exceed 54%, and global giants like Volkswagen, Toyota, and Hyundai are increasingly turning to Chinese AI and autonomous driving firms for technology they can no longer develop quickly enough on their own.
During January and February 2026, Volkswagen retook the top spot with a 13.9% market share, just edging out Geely at 13.8%. Toyota’s joint ventures held 7.8%, while BYD, the world’s largest EV maker and a dominant force in 2024 and much of 2025, slipped to fourth place at 7.1%. This followed six consecutive months of declining sales, its sharpest drop since the pandemic began. At first glance, these figures suggest a foreign resurgence. But they are better understood as a subsidy hangover.
China ended its purchase tax exemptions and trade-in incentives for new energy vehicles at the close of 2025. The removal hit domestic EV and plug-in hybrid manufacturers hardest, as their sales volumes had been inflated by subsidies that made their cheapest models artificially attractive. BYD’s January sales fell more than 30% year-on-year, and February saw a 41% decline. In contrast, Volkswagen and Toyota, whose lineups rely more heavily on conventional petrol and hybrid models, were relatively insulated. The foreign brands did not improve; the playing field simply became less tilted.
The scale of the loss is staggering. Foreign automakers have lost roughly one-third of the Chinese market in five years. Domestic brands now control nearly 70% of passenger vehicle sales, up from less than 40% in 2020. NEVs,including battery electrics, plug-in hybrids, and extended-range models,are expected to account for more than 54% of all car sales in China in 2026. Within the NEV segment, Chinese brands hold over 85% of the market. The foreign marques that once defined aspiration for Chinese consumers,Volkswagen, Toyota, Honda, BMW, Mercedes,are now fighting for a shrinking share.
The casualties are real. Skoda confirmed in March that it will exit China by mid-2026 after its sales collapsed 95%, from a peak of 341,000 vehicles in 2018 to just 15,000 in 2025. Honda’s sales have fallen for five consecutive years, dropping 24% in 2025 to 650,000 units, and its January 2026 volume of 57,489 was down another 16.5%. Volkswagen has been cutting EV production globally as demand in its home markets faltered, and in China its two joint ventures delivered 2.69 million vehicles in 2025, an 8% year-on-year decline.
The 2026 Beijing Auto Show, held in late April across 380,000 square metres with more than 1,000 exhibitors, was where foreign brands revealed their strategy for survival. The answer, almost universally, was to become more Chinese.
Volkswagen unveiled the ID. UNYX 09, an electric sedan co-developed with XPeng in just two years at VW’s new research and development centre in Hefei. The company plans to launch more than 20 EVs in China this year and expand to 50 by 2030 across its Volkswagen, Audi, and Jetta sub-brands. Hyundai launched its all-electric IONIQ brand in China with the IONIQ V, which uses an autonomous driving system co-developed with Chinese AI company Momenta and runs on a Qualcomm Snapdragon 8295 chipset. Beijing Hyundai plans 20 new models in China over five years, targeting 500,000 annual sales. Nissan integrated DeepSeek AI into its N7 electric sedan and announced five new energy vehicles within 12 months.
The pattern is consistent: foreign automakers are partnering with Chinese technology companies because they cannot develop competitive software fast enough on their own. Chinese domestic brands update their in-car software, autonomous driving features, and AI assistants on cycles measured in months. Even Tesla, which reclaimed the quarterly global EV sales crown from BYD in Q1 2026, cannot run its latest Full Self-Driving software in China. BYD’s God’s Eye system has been deployed across 2.3 million vehicles. XPeng’s VLA 2.0 has obtained Level 4 pilot operation permits in Guangzhou. The technology gap that once favoured Western automakers has now reversed.
There are exceptions. Toyota is the only Japanese automaker that grew in China in 2025, selling 1.78 million vehicles for a slight year-on-year increase. The turnaround came from two moves: a $15,000 electric vehicle built specifically for the Chinese market, and a hybrid lineup that benefits from the subsidy expiration because hybrids are cheaper to produce than full electrics and do not depend on purchase incentives to be price-competitive.
GM reported nearly 1.9 million deliveries in China in 2025, up 2.3%, with new energy vehicle sales rising 22.6%. Buick surged 54%, and Cadillac’s LYRIQ deliveries jumped 90%. But analysts note that the bulk of GM’s China volume comes from SAIC-GM-Wuling, its joint venture that sells ultra-low-cost mini EVs in a segment with razor-thin margins. GM’s own branded vehicles through SAIC-GM represent roughly 2.1% of the passenger market. As one analyst put it, the Detroit company is surviving rather than thriving.
Tesla’s global sales slump has opened a window for competitors, but in China that window is being filled by domestic brands, not foreign ones. BYD sold 4.54 million vehicles in 2025, all of them new energy vehicles. Geely overtook Volkswagen to become the second-largest automaker in China with 2.61 million sales, driven by NEV growth exceeding 80%. Xiaomi delivered more than 410,000 cars in its first full year of production and is targeting 550,000 in 2026. These are not legacy automakers bolting electric powertrains onto existing platforms. They are technology companies that happen to make cars, and their competitive advantage is software, not sheet metal.
The Beijing Auto Show made this visible. Horizon Robotics introduced its Starry chip, a 5-nanometre automotive-grade processor with 650 TOPS of computing power, and more than ten automakers including BYD, Chery, and Volkswagen expressed interest. The Chinese EV ecosystem has its own chip designers, its own AI model providers, its own autonomous driving stacks, and its own battery supply chain. Foreign automakers entering this ecosystem are not competing against individual companies. They are competing against an industrial infrastructure optimised for electric, intelligent, connected vehicles from the ground up.
Volkswagen’s early 2026 market share recovery is real but contextual. The subsidy hangover suppressed domestic EV sales in January and February, and BYD’s March figures already showed a return to the top with 295,693 vehicles sold. VW’s own projections place the true turning point for its joint ventures in 2027, when it expects profit contributions to reach 2 billion euros. The question is whether the market will wait.
Europe’s broader push to compete with China and the United States is mirrored in the automotive strategies of its largest manufacturers, but the competitive dynamics in China are harsher than in any other market. Chinese consumers have moved on from the assumption that foreign means better. In a market where NEV penetration is heading past 54%, where autonomous driving features are standard on mid-range domestic vehicles, and where software updates arrive monthly, the brand equity that Volkswagen and Toyota spent decades building is depreciating faster than the cars themselves.
The foreign brands that survive in China will be the ones that stop trying to sell Chinese consumers what worked in Europe and start building what works in China. Volkswagen’s partnership with XPeng and Hyundai’s collaboration with Momenta suggest they understand this. The question is whether localisation at this speed is possible for organisations designed to develop vehicles on five-year cycles in a market that moves in five-month ones. The Beijing Auto Show was full of announcements. The sales figures for the rest of 2026 will determine which of those announcements were strategies and which were eulogies.
(Source: The Next Web)




