Sweden’s decade-long boom in electric cars hit its first setback in 2024. Battery-electric sales fell almost 16% from the previous year, the sharpest drop since the market took off, as high interest rates, the end of purchase subsidies, and delayed model launches cooled demand. Plug-in hybrids bucked the trend slightly, but the combined share of plug-in cars slipped, marking a pause in the country’s push toward full electrification.
Headline Numbers
- Battery-electric cars (BEVs): 94,333 units, down 15.9% from 112,179 in 2023.
- Total car market: 269,498 units, down 7%.
- BEV market share: 35.0%, down from 38.7% in 2023.
- Plug-in hybrids (PHEVs): 63,087 units, up 3.3%, taking 23.4% share.
- Combined plug-in share: 58.4%, but overall trend still negative.

Why BEV Registrations Fell
| Factor | Impact |
| Economic headwinds | Sweden was in technical recession in 2024. High interest rates and inflation squeezed households, delaying purchases. |
| End of subsidies | Bonus–malus low-emission car subsidy ended in late 2022. Many buyers pulled purchases forward into Q4 2022, leaving weaker demand through 2024. |
| Residual value fears | Tesla’s price cuts, followed by others, to counter Chinese entrants (MG, BYD) raised fears of rapid depreciation. |
| Charging anxiety | Public chargers grew 78% in 2023, but only 9% are DC fast chargers—well below EU average. Rural coverage gaps remain. |
| Model-cycle delays | Key BEVs (VW ID.3 facelift, Kia Niro update) arrived late in 2024 or were pushed to 2025, limiting showroom interest. |
Immediate Effects
- CO₂ emissions: Average for new cars rose from 61 g/km in 2023 to 64 g/km in 2024, the first increase in years.
- Corporate vs. private sales: Corporate registrations held up better, but both fell. Financing costs and tax changes slowed fleet renewal.
- Used market: Fewer new BEVs entering the fleet tightened supply of nearly-new EVs, supporting second-hand prices despite heavy new-car discounting.
Outlook for 2025
Mobility Sweden forecast: 275,000 total registrations (+2%).
BEV share: Expected rebound to around 40%, driven by:
- Likely interest-rate cuts improving affordability.
- New model launches: Volvo EX90, VW ID.7 Tourer, Kia EV3.
- Policy signals: lobbying for lower electricity tax on EV charging, reinstated purchase or leasing rebates, and expanded charging grants.
- Tighter 2025 EU CO₂ fleet targets giving automakers more incentive to push BEVs.
Bottom Line
2024 marked a pause after a decade of rapid BEV growth in Sweden. Whether it’s just a dip or the start of a plateau will depend on the economic rebound and whether the government brings back targeted incentives.
