U.S. Cools Off, Europe Loses Ground, and China Raises the Bar Again — A Look at the Global Auto Market

The global auto market shifted upward in October — almost everywhere.

November 24, 2025 at 12:21 PM / News

Worldwide sales of passenger cars and light commercial vehicles reached 8.19 million units in October 2025, a 2.9% increase over the same month last year. According to GlobalData, total sales for the first ten months climbed to 75.2 million vehicles, marking 4.7% growth year-to-date.

China continues to dominate the industry’s leaderboard. The country posted 2.64 million sales in October, up 5.4%, further extending its lead. The United States, however, moved in the opposite direction: 1.27 million vehicles were sold — a 4.7% drop compared with last year.

Europe delivered a mixed but generally stable performance. Western European markets grew 3%, reaching 1.1 million sales, while Eastern Europe posted a stronger 5.6% rise with 450,000 vehicles sold.

South America also stayed in positive territory, inching up 1.8% to 296,000 units. Among major markets, Japan slipped 1.9%, and South Korea saw a sharper decline of 11.3%. Canada, on the other hand, was a standout performer, growing 7.7% to 156,500 units.

Taken together, the data suggests that the global auto industry is still expanding — but the momentum is far from uniform. China and Europe continue to support overall growth, while the U.S. and South Korea are clearly running at a slower pace.

You may also be interested in the news:

New Tesla Model Y Added to Police Fleet, Wears the Badge Well
Is It True You Should Let Air Out of Your Tires for Driving on Snow and Ice?
10 Supercars the Public Didn’t Understand: They Arrived at the Wrong Time
There Are Better Options: Experts Name 6 SUVs to Avoid
Toyota Recalls Land Cruiser 300 Over Critical Transmission Defect
First Tesla Cybercab Rolls Off the Line: No Pedals, No Steering Wheel, 310-Mile Range
Military Tech in Your Car: 9 Systems That Came Straight From Defense
Hundreds of Thousands for the Car, But Paid Wallpapers Too: Audi Launches New Monetization Trend