Battery electric vehicles accounted for 23.3% of deliveries, while electrified vehicles including hybrids and plug-in hybrids came close to half the market. The Tesla Model Y was Australia’s top-selling vehicle for the second consecutive month, and BYD came within 243 sales of Toyota for the number-one brand position. For many buyers, this confirms that EVs and Chinese-built models are no longer niche alternatives. They are now central to the new-car finance conversation.

For borrowers, the practical takeaway is not simply to follow the trend. It is to compare the whole cost of ownership. A lower running cost can support the case for an EV, particularly for drivers covering higher kilometres or businesses managing fuel exposure. However, the finance decision still needs to factor in purchase price, deposit size, loan term, charging access, insurance, warranty coverage, resale assumptions and any tax treatment relevant to business use.

The surge also has implications for delivery timing and bargaining power. Strong demand for popular EVs and plug-in hybrids can limit discounts on some models, while fast-growing brands may use sharp pricing, inclusions or promotional finance to win market share. That makes it important to compare car loan options rather than focusing only on the advertised vehicle price or headline interest rate.

This is also an extension of the recent EV momentum seen in earlier monthly sales results. The difference now is scale. When the best-selling vehicle is electric and a fast-growing EV-led brand is challenging Toyota, lenders, dealers and buyers all need to adjust their assumptions about demand, depreciation and vehicle suitability.

Small business owners and sole traders should be especially careful. A ute, SUV or EV used for work may require different finance structures, documentation and tax considerations than a private family car. Before signing, it can be useful to model repayments across multiple loan terms and allow for running costs, not just the monthly instalment.

The June result does not mean every buyer should go electric. It does mean car finance comparisons in Australia now need to treat EVs, hybrids and emerging brands as mainstream options. The smartest borrowers will look beyond the badge and assess suitability, affordability and long-term value before committing.

Author: Paige Estritori
Published: Friday 10th July, 2026

Please Note: If this information affects you or is relevant to your circumstances, seek advice from a licensed professional.

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