
Vietnam’s electric car champion sold nearly as many vehicles as Toyota, Hyundai, and Ford combined—signaling a structural shift with global implications.
Vietnam’s auto market just delivered a signal global investors cannot ignore: a domestic electric vehicle maker has overtaken nearly every foreign incumbent at once. In 2025, VinFast delivered more vehicles at home than Toyota, Hyundai, and Ford combined, underscoring how rapidly Southeast Asia’s growth story is being reshaped by electrification, local champions, and consumer economics.
According to aggregated industry data from the Vietnam Automobile Manufacturers Association, Hyundai Thanh Cong, and VinFast, Vietnam’s auto market sold 604,134 vehicles in 2025, up 22% year-on-year and the highest level on record. The figure excludes several imported luxury and Chinese brands that do not disclose sales, but the headline is clear: VinFast alone delivered 175,099 vehicles—nearly 30% of the market and the highest annual volume ever achieved by a single manufacturer in Vietnam’s three-decade auto history. Every one of those vehicles was fully electric.
The scale of VinFast’s momentum is best illustrated by December. In that single month, the company delivered 27,649 vehicles—roughly equal to Kia’s entire annual sales in Vietnam and comparable to Honda’s full-year total. By contrast, full-year deliveries for Toyota reached 71,954 units, Hyundai 53,229 units, and Ford 50,450 units—together only marginally ahead of VinFast on its own.
The company’s dominance is not driven by a single hit model but by a portfolio spanning mass-market segments. In multi-purpose vehicles, the all-electric Limo Green, launched only in August, sold 27,127 units and ended a six-year reign by Mitsubishi’s Xpander as Vietnam’s best-selling MPV. In December alone, the model posted 10,981 deliveries—the highest monthly sales ever recorded by a single vehicle in the country. Analysts point to a combination of seven-seat practicality, sharply lower running costs than gasoline vehicles, and Vietnam’s registration-fee exemptions for EVs.
Urban SUVs tell a similar story. The VF 5 led its segment with 43,913 units in 2025, while the VF 6 disrupted the fiercely competitive B-SUV category with 23,291 deliveries, outperforming gasoline rivals such as the Mitsubishi Xforce and Toyota Yaris Cross. Higher-end models VF 8 and VF 9 maintained steady volumes, reinforcing VinFast’s coverage from entry-level to premium—an advantage few EV makers in emerging markets can claim.
Perhaps most telling for foreign manufacturers, VinFast was the only top-four brand in Vietnam to grow market share in 2025. Hyundai Thanh Cong saw its share fall sharply from 13.6% in 2024 to 8.8%, while other global brands also ceded ground. The message is unambiguous: in one of Southeast Asia’s fastest-growing auto markets, local EV economics—tax incentives, charging costs, and value-for-money positioning—are now overpowering legacy brand loyalty.
For global automakers, investors, and policymakers, Vietnam is no longer just a future EV opportunity—it is a live case study. If a domestic electric brand can out-sell three global giants combined at home, the bigger question is not whether Vietnam will electrify, but which markets might be next to follow the same path.
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Source: Vietnam Insider

