Through the first seven months of 2024, Hyundai, Kia, and Genesis accounted for 10% of the US EV market. Hyundai outpaced Ford (7.4%) and GM (6.3%), according to Motor Intelligence.

Tesla’s share of the US EV market slipped below 50% for the first time in the second quarter. Tesla accounted for 49.7% of EV sales in the US in Q2 as new models hit the market.

Although IONIQ 5 and 6 sales slipped last month, they are still up 25% and 54% year-to-date, respectively. Meanwhile, sister company Kia continued its record-setting performance in July after EV sales nearly doubled YTD.

Kia’s new EV9, its first three-row electric SUV, is a major part of its growth. According to Kelley Blue Book, Kia EV9 sales outpaced the Toyota bZ4X, VW ID.4, Nissan Ariya, Rivian R1T, and Tesla Model S in the US through the first half of 2024. It even topped Kia’s Niro EV sales.

  • Mac
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    3 months ago

    Also, in comparison to a Soul, i want a barebones base-model. Quit trying to sell me luxury technology at an inflated price.

    Why the fuck does the base model have Wi-Fi hotspot, touch screen navigation, Android auto, Apple carplay, auto-braking collision avoidance, smart cruise, lane assist, heated seats, bluetooth link, parking sensors, heated mirrors, dual temp control, Sirius XM, and more.

    it’s over $40k USD and none of that shit is necessary.
    I want a casket with a battery, a couple motors, and a steering wheel for cheap.
    THAT’s how you get electric adoption.

    • xyguy@startrek.website
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      3 months ago

      Yeah i think you are right. There hasn’t been a “peoples car” EV like the original beetle or even the Kia Soul.

      If they could get a decent compact ev for around 25k they could sell as many as they can make i think.