Tesla’s South Korea sales numbers for March were hard to ignore. The company registered 11,134 vehicles in the country, a 330% jump from the same month a year ago, according to market researcher Carisyou.
That single month broke a historic record. It made Tesla the first imported car brand ever to top 10,000 units in a single month in South Korea.
The broader market shift was just as striking. For the first time, total EV sales in South Korea overtook hybrid sales, with EVs taking a 47.8% slice of the imported car market.
Tesla, Inc., TSLA
Zooming out to the full quarter, Tesla posted 20,964 deliveries in South Korea — its second-best quarter ever in the country. That 335% year-over-year surge was partly driven by an early rollout of government EV subsidies, which were finalized in January rather than the usual March.
Tesla also leaned on price cuts to its China-made Model Y and Model 3 vehicles, sparking wider price competition among EV makers in the Korean market.
The brand rankings in March told their own story. Tesla, BMW, and Mercedes-Benz took the top three spots — putting an EV-only brand shoulder-to-shoulder with two German giants that still sell gasoline and hybrid models.
The next chapter is already generating buzz. Tesla’s new six-seat Model Y L has been drawing large crowds to its Starfield Hanam showroom in Seoul ahead of its official launch.
The Model Y L features a wheelbase extended by roughly 150mm, a true 2-2-2 seating layout, and a stated range of 543km. It has already received regulatory approval in South Korea and is on public display with multiple color options available.
Tesla has also rolled out Model Y L ordering across eight Asian markets, including Japan, Hong Kong, and Singapore.
Tesla’s run hasn’t gone uncontested. China’s BYD entered South Korea’s top four imported brands for the first time — a notable shift in a market long dominated by European names.
BYD brings manufacturing scale and a broad EV lineup, often at competitive prices. Its arrival means the South Korean EV market is no longer a two-horse race between Tesla and the German brands.
Tesla’s global delivery numbers add some context here. Global deliveries fell 14% quarter-on-quarter last quarter, missing analyst expectations. If production and shipping can’t keep pace with South Korean demand, it opens the door for rivals to gain ground.
The coming weeks will be the real test — whether the record March figures and pre-launch Model Y L interest translate into sustained sales momentum through Q2.
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