Global EV adoption is accelerating faster than previous projections, with 116 million electric vehicles expected to be in operation by 2026, according to new data from Gartner. The forecast spans passenger cars, buses, vans and heavy-duty commercial vehicles — reflecting how electrification is now reshaping mobility end-to-end, not just private transportation.
Despite tariff barriers, subsidy rollbacks and uneven charging infrastructure, EV penetration continues to deepen across both mature and emerging markets. Gartner attributes the growth to improving battery economics, stronger domestic manufacturing ecosystems and a shift in consumer preference toward cleaner mobility.
China to Dominate 61% of Global EV Installed Base
According to Gartner senior director analyst Jonathan Davenport, China will remain the global heavyweight in EV adoption, accounting for 61% of all EVs on the road by 2026.
While battery electric vehicles (BEVs) will still represent the majority of EVs worldwide, consumers are increasingly gravitating toward plug-in hybrid EVs (PHEVs) — driven by range reassurance and inconsistent long-distance charging access.
Gartner forecasts a 32% year-over-year increase in PHEV ownership, highlighting the role of hybrids as a transitional technology in markets where charging ecosystems are still scaling.
Why EV Momentum Continues Despite Policy Shifts
Government subsidies for EV purchases are tapering off in many regions, and the United States has implemented new tariffs on imported vehicles. Yet these headwinds have not slowed down adoption momentum.
Industry analysts point to three underlying forces sustaining global EV demand:
Rapid battery cost declines and mass-scale production.
Tightening emissions regulations, forcing automakers toward electrified line-ups.
Corporate fleet electrification, driven by ESG commitments and lifecycle cost savings.
The result is a market that is expanding even without the heavy policy incentives that previously fuelled early adoption.
The Sustainability Equation: Transport Decarbonisation at Scale
With transport accounting for nearly a quarter of global COâ‚‚ emissions, the projected rise to 116 million EVs represents a significant milestone in the decarbonisation of mobility.
Industry leaders note that this transition will drive:
Lower urban pollution levels
Reduced dependence on fossil fuels
Stronger localised supply chains for batteries and critical minerals
Investment in circular-economy practices for battery recycling
Electric commercial vehicles — especially buses and delivery fleets — are expected to play an outsized role in cutting emissions in high-density corridors.
EV Installed Base Outlook (Worldwide, 2025–2026)
| Vehicle Type | 2025 Installed Base | 2026 Installed Base |
|---|---|---|
| Battery Electric Vehicles (BEV) | 59,480,370 | 76,344,452 |
| Plug-in Hybrid EVs (PHEV) | 30,074,582 | 39,835,111 |
| Total EVs on Road | 89,554,951 | 116,179,563 |
Source: Gartner (December 2025)
A Pivotal Turning Point for the Auto Industry
Gartner’s forecast reinforces what automakers and energy companies already understand: the global mobility system is now structurally transitioning to electric.
The next challenges lie in:
Scaling fast, reliable charging networks
Building resilient battery and semiconductor supply chains
Enhancing grid capacity for EV load balancing
Accelerating sustainable battery recycling systems
But the trajectory is clear. Electrification is no longer a niche trend — it’s an industrial realignment reshaping how nations plan infrastructure, how companies build fleets and how consumers make transportation choices.
