Australia’s new-vehicle market had a steady start for the year with a total of 87,753 vehicles delivered in January, an increase of just 0.1 per cent.

Private sales were essentially flat and business and government sales were down, leaving rental companies to save the day – sales to these organisations were up by 47 per cent.

Registrations of petrol-powered vehicles slumped by 14.7 per cent compared with January 2025, while plug-in hybrids (PHEVs) were up 170.5 per cent.

Collating data from the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries’ VFACTS report and the Electric Vehicle Council’s monthly sales report, electric vehicles (EVs) were up by 93.3 per cent. This increase would have been higher were it not for EV market-leader Tesla, which fell by 32.2 per cent year-on-year (YoY).

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Hybrids were up by only 2.0 per cent, hurt by a significant decline in Toyota RAV4 deliveries.

The top-selling vehicle, therefore, wasn’t the RAV4 as it was in December 2025. Instead, the Ford Ranger ute took the top spot, with the Toyota HiLux in second place and the Mazda CX-5 in third.

“We are seeing fewer petrol vehicles sold and rapid growth in plug-in hybrids, while uptake of hybrid and battery electric vehicles is more stable,” said FCAI chief executive Tony Weber.

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Toyota sales slumped by 22.3 per cent, hurt somewhat by the transition between HiLux generations (sales were down by 15.2 per cent) but much more so by the thinning of current RAV4 stock.