Honda has reportedly frozen plans for an electric vehicle (EV) factory which was set to build 240,000 EVs annually as part of the Japanese brand’s push into electrification.

According to Nikkei Asia, the planned factory in the Canadian province of Ontario – already delayed by two years beyond its original 2028 opening target – has now been postponed indefinitely and could be cancelled outright.

Honda has yet to make an official announcement confirming the decision.

The project was announced in April 2024 to great fanfare, with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau attending as Honda planned to invest C$15 billion (A$15.3 billion) into the facility in addition to support from the Canadian government.

In addition to the vehicle plant, this multi-billion-dollar investment was set to include a battery plant with a capacity of 36GWh per year.

CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal.

Honda 0 Saloon
Honda 0 Saloon

Honda will instead build EVs at its plants in the US state of Ohio, where it invested around US$1 billion (A$1.4 billion) to enable production of EVs, hybrids and internal combustion-engined vehicles on the same production line.

In mid-2025, Honda announced it would slash its previously announced ¥10 trillion (A$103 billion) investment in EVs and related technologies through 2030 by 30 per cent to ¥7 trillion (A$74 billion).

The news follows the cancellation of two of the three upcoming Honda 0 Series electric vehicles, with a futuristic sedan and SUV previously earmarked for the US – and potentially Australia – axed. Honda also pulled the plug on the upcoming electric Acura RSX.

Plans remain for a single Indian-made 0 Alpha small electric SUV, which Honda Australia told CarExpert remains under consideration for the local lineup when production starts in 2027.

Honda Super-One
Honda Super-One