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Chinese passenger vehicle sales rose for the third consecutive month in April

China's car sales in April rose for a third month, up 14.8% from a year earlier, as government-subsidised auto trade-ins mitigated the impact of U.S. tariffs on consumer sentiment.

The China Passenger Car Association reported on Sunday that passenger vehicle sales for the month of December totaled 1.78 million vehicles, and the first four months in 2025 saw an 8.2% increase from the same period a decade earlier.

Last month, sales of new energy vehicles (electric vehicles, plug-in hybrids and other electric vehicles) increased by 33.9% on an annual basis, making up 50.8%.

Official data shows that the government program which offers larger subsidies to those who trade in their old cars for electric vehicles than they do for gasoline cars, covered 2,71 million cars by April 24. This scheme has helped cushion the blow on consumer confidence due to the increased U.S. trade tariffs against Chinese exports.

CPCA data show that car exports fell 2.2% from a month earlier in April, extending a 8% drop in March.

According to the association, automated driving systems are losing their appeal as a sales catalyst among domestic buyers.

After BYD announced its intention to make its "God's Eye", driver-assistance technology, standard across all of its models in February, the focus shifted from years-long price competition in the largest auto market in terms of automated driving features.

The fervor to promote driver-assistance technology is cooling after a crackdown by the government on marketing terms such as "smart" and "autonomous", which were used to describe their technologies following a fatal accident involving a Xiaomi SU7 car in March.

The car caught fire seconds after the driver attempted to take control of the vehicle using the assisted-driving feature. Reporting by David Kirton and Jenny Wang; Editing by Edmund Klamann, Christian Schmollinger and Qiaoyi LI

(source: Reuters)