Rising fuel costs and waning interest in fully electric cars have divided the U.S. auto market. Automakers with strong hybrid lineups gained ground, while those without them lost. The result is a two-tier market where winning and losing depend on the mix of vehicles sold.
The diverging fortunes of automakers reflect a fundamental shift in consumer preferences. With gas prices surging over 20% from 2025 levels, buyers increasingly opt for hybrids that combine fuel efficiency with the convenience of gasoline refueling, rather than committing to fully electric vehicles that depend on charging infrastructure. This trend has bolstered companies with strong hybrid lineups like Toyota and Hyundai, while punishing those like GM that focused heavily on all-electric models.
Hybrids Boom While EV Demand Cools
AAA reports that gasoline costs have risen over 20% compared to the same timeframe in 2025. That pushed many buyers toward fuel-efficient hybrids. Randy Parker, CEO of Hyundai and Genesis North America, said, "Hybrids are definitely our growth engine right now. Hybrids are really, really taking off right now as consumers, I think, are prioritizing fuel efficiency and lower operating costs due to high gas prices."
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Kia posted a roughly 3% overall sales gain, with hybrid sales skyrocketing 152% in Q2. Honda reported an 8.4% overall sales increase, driven by record electrified sales. Toyota, the global hybrid leader, posted a 1.1% sales gain, with its electrified vehicles up about 20%.
Even automakers with limited hybrid offerings saw sales rise. Stellantis reported a 5.9% increase. Nissan gained 9.6%. Tiago Castro, Nissan's senior sales and marketing officer for the Americas, remarked, "At a time when customers are focused on maximizing the value of every dollar they spend, our lineup is delivering with strong quality, capability and the right mix of products."
GM Slips as Toyota Gains Ground
General Motors, America's best-selling automaker, sells numerous electric vehicles but has just a single hybrid model - the low-volume Corvette. That strategy backfired in Q2. GM's overall sales fell 4.2%.
EV sales dropped 33% compared to last year. All four GM brands declined: Cadillac down 19.2%, Buick down 7.5%, Chevrolet down 3.9%, and GMC down 0.3%. The Chevrolet Silverado pickup saw a 7.7% sales drop, and its electric version plunged 25.9%.
The GMC Sierra, however, managed a 5% increase, including double-digit increases for its electric and light-duty 1500 models.
GM President Duncan Aldred defended the company's position, saying, "Our business is performing well, and customer demand is resilient, especially for our trucks and SUVs. The depth, breadth and appeal of our vehicle portfolio allows us to lead the market in sales, while maintaining discipline on inventory, pricing and incentives to deliver strong margins."
But analysts see trouble. Cox Automotive's Charlie Chesbrough, an economist and director of industry insights, stated during a media event, "At these rates, and what we're seeing right now in the selling rates, GM may be looking over their shoulder here when we get to the year's end, that Toyota could potentially overtake them as the top selling manufacturer here in the U.S. market." Cox expects Ford's Q2 sales to fall 11.5% and Tesla's to drop more than 20%, because EV demand surged last year in anticipation that the Trump administration would eliminate the up to $7,500 tax credit for EV buyers. Cox Automotive predicted last week that full-year U.S. auto sales would fall 2.9% to 15.8 million vehicles, with retail sales dropping 3.4% and a June adjusted selling rate of 16.1 million.
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