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Tesla's China-made EV sales jump 36% in April, extending rebound

May 7, 2026 4:52 AM

BEIJING, May 7 (Reuters) - Tesla's ‌China-made EV sales ​jumped ​36% on the year in April, a sixth month of gains, as the U.S. automaker fights to hold ‌ground against a wave of cheaper Chinese rivals.

Deliveries of Model ⁠3 and Model Y vehicles built at Tesla's Shanghai plant, including those exported ‌to Europe and other markets, ‌totaled 79,478 units, data from China Passenger Car Association showed on Thursday.

That was down 7.2% from March this year but well ​above April 2025 levels.

The figures suggest Tesla is stabilizing in its two most important markets outside the U.S. after a bruising ⁠stretch of market share losses, though regulatory delays around its Full Self-Driving software and new ​Chinese EVs may limit the recovery.

The U.S. automaker's sales continued to recover last month in several European markets, ​including Sweden, France and Denmark. This was ‌supported by stronger demand for battery EVs as oil prices spiked due to the U.S.-Iran conflict.

REGULATORY OBSTACLES, ⁠FSD APPROVAL REMAIN

Tesla faces regulatory obstacles, with the path toward approval of its Full Self-Driving (FSD) system highly valued by customers, particularly in China, still uncertain.

The ⁠company now expects to secure full FSD approval in China by the third ​quarter, CFO Vaibhav Taneja said in April, a delay from its initial target of the first quarter.

Emails from some European regulators reviewed by Reuters indicate EU ‌scepticism toward the technology.

The recovery follows a punishing stretch for Tesla, which lost almost half its European ‌market share in 2025.

Nevertheless, Tesla is stepping up efforts to defend ⁠its position against new Chinese ‌models by developing a ​cheaper, compact SUV produced in China, Reuters reported last month.

(Reporting by Qiaoyi Li and Ju-min Park, Editing by ‌Bernadette Baum)

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