Tesla regains some market share around Europe in February, a sign of stabilising sales

(Reuters) – Tesla gained market share in key European markets in February, official data showed, signalling some ​stabilisation on the continent after two straight years ‌of declining sales.

In France, the U.S. electric vehicle maker’s registrations, a proxy for sales, rose 55% even as most rivals sold fewer ​cars in the country than a year ago.

Registrations more ​than doubled from February 2024 in Portugal. They increased ⁠74% in Spain, 32% in Norway and 14% in Belgium, but fell ​45% in the Netherlands, 18% in Denmark and 7% in Italy.

The ​UK and Germany, Europe’s largest car markets, are set to report later in the week.

Tesla’s European sales fell 27% last year amid ​rising competition, particularly from Chinese EV brands, controversy ​over Elon Musk’s politics and an ageing model lineup.

Last year, Tesla unveiled ‌cheaper ⁠versions of its Model Y and Model 3 in the U.S. and Europe, which started to roll out to consumers late last year.

The company’s market share in the ​European Union, ​Britain and the ⁠European Free Trade Association slid marginally to 0.8% in January from 1% in ​the same month in 2025.

That remains far ​below ⁠its 1.8% market share in 2025, 2.5% in 2024 and 2.9% in 2023, when its signature Model Y ⁠SUV ​was the world’s best-selling model.

Reporting ​by Alessandro Parodi, Camille Raynaud, Anna Ringstrom, Marie Mannes and Javi ​West Larrañaga; Editing by Nivedita Bhattacharjee and David Gregorio