BMW surges past European rivals as EV sales top 100,000 in Q3

BMWโ€™s electric vehicles are โ€œwinning over customers worldwide,โ€ with sales rising by double-digits in the third quarter. With over 100,000 EVs sold over the last three months, BMW is taking market share from European rivals.

โ€œOur fully-electric vehicles are winning over customers worldwide,โ€ Jochen Goller, BMW AG board member for customer, brand, and sales, said on Thursday.

BMW Group, including Mini, sold 103,440 EVs in the third quarter, an increase of 10% from Q3 2023. With over 294,000 EVs sold through the first nine months of 2024, BMWโ€™s electric vehicle sales are up 19.1% compared to last year.

The BMW brand accounted for 266,151 (+22.6% YOY) of its total EV sales. BMW said it saw exceptionally high demand in Europe, including the UK, Italy, and France.

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โ€œThe BMW brand captured market share in Europe and significantly outperformed the regionโ€™s total market,โ€ Goller explained.

In Europe, the BMW brand delivered 121,844 EVs through the first nine months of 2024, up 35.8% compared to last year. BMWโ€™s iX1 and i4 carried the growth.

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The new BMW i4 M50 xDrive (Source: BMW)

BMW EV sales top 100,000 in Q3 2024

According to Jato Dynamics research, BMWโ€™s EV sales in Europe topped Teslaโ€™s for the first time in July 2024.

The growth was enough to outperform European rival Mercedes-Benz. Mercedes sold 46,900 EVs in Q3, down 8% from the second quarter and 31% from Q3 2023. Mercedes EV sales are down 22% through the first nine months of 2024, with 148,500 units sold.

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BMW iX1 (Source: BMW)

Despite this, BMW Groupโ€™s overall sales fell 13% in Q3 (540,882) and were down 4.5% (1,754,158) through September.

Sales in China slipped nearly 30% in the third quarter (147,691), causing BMW to lower its full-year 2024 sales guidance.

Mercedesโ€™ sales in China also slipped by double-digits from last year as an influx of new, lower-priced EVs continued driving out foreign brands. The company cited lower demand for luxury vehicles and an intensifying price war for the slowing sales.

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