As 2025 draws to a close, China's auto market is caught between two forces: the impending reduction of new energy vehicle (NEV) purchase tax exemptions and the extension of national subsidy policies like trade-in incentives. This tension has created a delicate balance for consumers, dealers, and automakers navigating between certainty and uncertainty.
Starting January 1, 2026, NEV purchase tax breaks will be halved from full exemption to 50% reduction, effectively raising the tax rate from 0% to 5%. The maximum tax-free amount will also drop from 30,000 yuan to 15,000 yuan. For example, buyers of a 300,000-yuan NEV would pay 15,000 yuan in taxes, while a 500,000-yuan vehicle would incur 35,000 yuan after accounting for the new cap.
Despite the Central Economic Work Conference's December 10-11 announcement about continuing trade-in subsidies, over 20 automakers including Zeekr, Xiaomi, and AITO have preemptively launched "tax protection" programs, offering up to 15,000 yuan to cover potential tax differences for orders locked in 2025 but delivered in 2026.
However, these measures haven't revived the traditional year-end sales surge.
Industry experts cite two reasons for the muted response: First, automakers' tax protection policies inadvertently delayed purchases as consumers waited for clearer 2026 subsidy details. Second, the impact was largely confined to price-sensitive buyers of sub-200,000-yuan vehicles.
Meanwhile, battery supply shortages have emerged as a new bottleneck. XPeng's CEO revealed urgent negotiations with battery suppliers, while Huawei's AITO reportedly switched some orders from CALB to CATL to meet delivery targets. Analysts attribute this to concentrated demand from automakers rushing to lock in orders before tax changes.
Looking ahead, the industry expects modest 3-5% growth in 2026, with opportunities shifting to lower-tier markets and service-based consumption like charging infrastructure and lifestyle services, marking a transition from policy-driven to product-driven competition.
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