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Honda Discontinues Prologue EV, Shifts Focus to Hybrids

Published Jul 16, 2026
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Summary:
  • Honda will stop selling the Prologue after a 40% drop in deliveries.
  • The company is shifting focus to hybrids, which made up about one-third of its June sales.
  • Honda plans to launch 15 new hybrid models by March 2030, mostly in North America.

The EV That Didn't Catch On

Honda is pulling the plug on its only electric car in the United States.

The Prologue, an SUV that arrived just last year, will no longer be sold after the 2026 model year. Production at a General Motors plant in Mexico is ending later this year. The reason is simple: not enough people wanted one.

Deliveries of the Prologue slumped 40%. That is a steep drop for a vehicle that was supposed to be Honda's big EV debut. Honda's total U.S. sales increased by only 2.4% during the first six months of the year, making the Prologue a drag rather than a boost.

Honda isn't leaving the car market, of course. It is just readjusting. Hybrids are the real story here.

In June, roughly one out of every three Hondas sold was a hybrid. That is a huge share for a technology that some people still think of as a stepping stone to full electrics.

Why Hybrids Win Right Now

Lance Woelfer, who runs Honda's U.S. sales operations, put it plainly: "We've certainly seen success with the Prologue. "But right now, the key for the marketplace is a balance of ICE and hybrid"." ICE stands for internal combustion engine - the old-school gas cars that still dominate American driveways.

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Honda is betting that most buyers are not ready to go all-electric, but they are happy to save gas with a hybrid. The company plans to roll out 15 new hybrid models by March 2030, with the first arriving next year. Most of those will be sold in North America.

That is a big pivot from the EV-only messaging a lot of automakers pushed a few years ago. Honda is following the money. Hybrids sell. The Prologue did not.

The Prologue was co-developed with General Motors, allowing the two companies to share development costs. By ending the vehicle, Honda is also stepping back from that partnership, at least for now. It may try again with EVs someday. Woelfer said, "There will be opportunity that we think we'll want to be a part of in the future, but when that is I can't say."

What This Means for Your Portfolio

For investors, Honda's move is a signal about where the auto industry is heading - and where it is not.

Electric vehicles still have a long road ahead. Even a giant like Honda could not make its only EV work in the U.S. market. That does not mean EVs are dead. It means the transition is slower and bumpier than the hype suggested.

Honda's stock (ticker: HMC) has not been a highflier. The company is known for reliability, not innovation. But its hybrid strategy could pay off.

Buyers want fuel efficiency without the range anxiety of a full EV. If Honda delivers those 15 hybrids on time, it could grab share from rivals that are scrambling to make EVs nobody wants.

The Prologue will live on as a used car. Honda says it will sell those through its certified pre-owned program. There is even an upside for shoppers: you might find a gently used electric Honda at a discount, since dealers need to clear them out.

For most investors, the bigger takeaway is this: watch where the demand is, not where the headlines are. Right now, demand is in hybrids. Honda is following that signal. That is a smart play, even if it means saying goodbye to its first EV.

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