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Made-in-China Cars Take Record 34.8% of Australia’s New-Car Market in May 2026 — BYD #2, Four Chinese Brands in the Top 10

by codydbadmin · June 23, 2026

Australia has become the single clearest stress-test of how far Made-in-China cars can push in a developed, right-hand-drive market. In May 2026 China-built passenger vehicles took a record 34.8% of all new-car sales — and for the first time on the FCAI’s published rankings, four of the country’s ten bestselling brands are Chinese. BYD slotted into the #2 spot overall, behind only Toyota.

The Numbers Behind the 34.8% Record

The May 2026 total light-vehicle market came in at roughly 107,000 units, down 2.3% year on year. Inside that softer overall print, China-built share grew 74.1% year on year to 37,000 units. Battery EVs hit 19.9% (21,000 units, +111.7% YoY) and PHEVs jumped 202.3% to 9,315 units — pushing the combined electrified share to 46.4%. Year-to-date through May, Australia’s new-vehicle market is 492,000 units, with Chinese marques accounting for an outsized share of the growth on top of a slightly contracting base.

Brand-by-Brand: Who Drove the Chinese Surge

BYD’s 8,211 units (+154.6% YoY) were led by the Sealion 7 EV SUV and the Shark 6 PHEV ute, the latter now offering a new entry cab/chassis variant and a Performance trim. GWM took #8 with 4,660 units, anchored by Tank 300/500 and the Haval H6 PHEV. Chery’s 4,401 units (+59.7%) put it at #9, with the Tiggo 4 outselling several legacy compacts. MG’s 3,872 units kept it at #10, ahead of Volkswagen, Honda and Nissan year-to-date. Geely is the dark horse: just two nameplates (EX5, Starray EM-i) delivered 2,636 units and 415.9% growth.

Why It Matters for Made-in-China Auto Strategy

Australia is the proof-point case study for Chinese OEMs because it has no domestic auto industry to protect, no anti-China tariffs, and a near-100% imported new-car parc. iEVChina’s full Australia H1 2026 breakdown tracks every Chinese brand’s volume, channel build-out and shipping logistics — including BYD taking delivery of its first dedicated 5,000-vehicle car carrier in May. The bigger signal: when buyers in a Western market actually get free-market access to Made-in-China cars, share moves fast. With BYD now standing up its own dedicated car-carrier fleet and four Chinese brands sitting inside Australia’s top ten, the 34.8% May share looks more like a floor than a peak heading into H2 2026.

Source: official disclosure / iEVChina analysis

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