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Much has been said of hybrids surging in popularity as electric vehicle (EV) growth cools, but plug-in hybrids (PHEVs) have been enjoying their moment, too.

From January to the end of September 2024, PHEV sales are up 120.5 per cent on the same period last year. That saw their growth outpace hybrids (up 87 per cent) and EVs (up 6.6 per cent).

This growth comes from a low base, however, and total PHEV sales of 15,546 pale in comparison to EVs (70,094) and hybrids (129,895).

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The Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV remains Australia’s best-selling PHEV, but it faces a formidable foe in the new BYD Sealion 6. BYD has sold 3207 examples of the Sealion 6, its first PHEV in Australia, despite only launching it in June.

That meant the Chinese SUV outsold its Japanese rival in the June-September period, with a total of 2462 Outlander PHEVs being delivered to customers in that time.

It remains to be seen whether the Outlander PHEV will again be toppled in the sales charts, if not this year than next, like it was in 2022 by the MG HS.

That year, Mitsubishi was running out the previous-generation Outlander PHEV, and now this year MG is in the same position with its HS Plus EV which has fallen several spots.

While the Outlander PHEV is the best-selling PHEV, it accounts for 20 per cent of total Outlander sales.

There are other vehicles, however, where PHEV variants account for a larger share of a model’s sales. These include the Volvo XC60 (40.6 per cent), Cupra Formentor (52.4 per cent), Alfa Romeo Tonale (46.5 per cent) and Volvo S60 (41.4 per cent).

Model PHEV sales (Jan-Sep) Total model sales % PHEV
Mitsubishi Outlander 4438 21,249 20.9
BYD Sealion 6 3207 3207 100.0
Mitsubishi Eclipse Cross 1944 7376 26.4
Mazda CX-60 1193 9781 12.2
Volvo XC60 624 1536 40.6
MG HS 533 2750 19.4
Cupra Formentor 431 823 52.4
Porsche Cayenne 379 1434 26.4
Audi Q5 344 1856 18.5
Lexus NX 281 4539 6.2
Volvo XC90 230 623 36.9
Mercedes-Benz C-Class 203 (AMG C 63) 1583 12.8
Ford Escape 187 354 52.8
Range Rover Sport 180 1738 10.4
Land Rover Defender 108 2427 4.4
Alfa Romeo Tonale 99 213 46.5
BMW XM 99 99 100.0
BMW X5 90 2334 3.9
Cupra Leon 83 259 32.0
Mercedes-Benz GLC 76 3218 2.4
Peugeot 3008 76 344 22.1
BMW 3 Series 74 2052 3.6
Volkswagen Touareg 74 623 11.9
Ferrari 296 GTB/GTS 72 138 (incl. total two-door Ferrari sales) 52.2
BMW X3 65 2616 2.5
Range Rover Evoque 62 467 13.3
Volvo S60 48 116 41.4
Peugeot 408 46 47 97.9
Range Rover 43 550 7.8
Peugeot 308 37 129 28.7
Peugeot 508 35 62 56.5
McLaren Artura 29 63 (incl. total McLaren sales) 46.0
Range Rover Velar 28 293 9.6
Jeep Compass 25 438 5.7
Jeep Grand Cherokee 22 519 4.2
Audi Q8 19 329 5.8
Ferrari SF90 17 138 12.3
Mercedes-AMG GT 11 11 100.0
Mini Countryman 9 1148 0.8
Bentley Bentayga 5 47 10.6
Land Rover Discovery Sport 5 268 1.9
Mercedes-Benz A-Class 5 1625 0.3
Kia Sorento 3 7748 0.0
Citroen C5 X 2 36 5.6
Mercedes-Benz E-Class 2 294 0.7
Bentley Flying Spur 1 19 5.3
Lamborghini Revuelto 1 124 (incl. all Lamborghini two-door sales) 0.8
Porsche Panamera 1 44 2.3

MORE: Australian EV sales: How they’re shaping up as 2024 nears its end
MORE: BYD Sealion 6: The Chinese SUV driving PHEV sales in Australia



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