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June EV Sales Surge Gives Australian Buyers More to Weigh Up

What a faster-moving electric car market means before you sign a finance contract

June EV Sales Surge Gives Australian Buyers More to Weigh Up?w=400

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Australia’s electric vehicle market has moved from steady growth to a genuine mainstream contest.
New vehicle figures for June 2026 show battery electric vehicles reached 23.3 per cent of monthly sales, meaning close to one in four new cars delivered was fully electric.
That is a notable step up from the one-in-six result seen earlier in the year, and it suggests buyers are no longer treating EVs as a niche option.

The bigger shift is not only the number of EVs being sold, but where the momentum is coming from. Chinese-built vehicles, including models from Chinese brands and some vehicles produced in China for global manufacturers, made up a substantial share of June deliveries. BYD continued to narrow the gap to Toyota, while the Tesla Model Y again showed how quickly an electric SUV can compete with traditional favourites.

For EV finance shoppers, this is good news and a warning at the same time. More competition can mean sharper driveaway pricing, better equipment levels and more lender appetite for eligible low-emission vehicles. It may also improve access to green car loan discounts for borrowers who meet the lender’s criteria. But a rapidly changing market can make resale values harder to predict, especially when newer models arrive with lower prices, longer range or faster charging.

That matters because an ev loan is not just about the monthly repayment. Buyers should look closely at the comparison rate, establishment fees, balloon payments, early payout rules and whether the vehicle qualifies for any green finance product. A cheaper sticker price can still become expensive if the loan structure is poorly matched to the borrower’s budget or ownership plans.

The June result also strengthens the case for planning before visiting a dealership. Buyers comparing a Tesla, BYD, Geely, MG or other fast-growing EV brand should model repayments across several terms and deposit amounts. This can help show whether a lower-rate green loan genuinely saves money, or whether a shorter term with a higher repayment is more suitable.

For used EV buyers, the surge in new deliveries may create more choice later, but vehicle history, battery warranty and remaining manufacturer support will become increasingly important. In a market moving this quickly, the smartest buyer is not necessarily the fastest buyer. It is the one who checks eligibility early, compares finance carefully and treats the car, the loan and the resale outlook as one connected decision.

Published:Tuesday, 14th Jul 2026
Author: Paige Estritori

Please Note: We do not endorse any specific products or companies. Some content is sourced from third parties, including press releases, and may not be independently verified for accuracy or completeness.

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