Tesla has just done something no automaker has ever done in Norway: sold more cars in a single year than any manufacturer in the country’s history, and there’s still a month left to go.
We’ve been tracking Tesla’s rollercoaster year in Norway closely, and Monday’s registration data from the Norwegian Road Federation (OFV) confirms what seemed impossible just months ago. Despite a brutal European backlash against CEO Elon Musk’s political activities, Norwegian buyers are flooding Tesla showrooms in record numbers.
The numbers are staggering. Tesla registered 6,215 new cars in November alone, bringing its January-November total to 28,606 vehicles. That eclipses the previous full-year record of 26,575 set by Volkswagen back in 2016.
| Metric | Figure |
|---|---|
| Tesla YTD Sales (Jan-Nov 2025) | 28,606 |
| Previous Record (VW 2016, Full Year) | 26,575 |
| Record Margin | +2,031 vehicles |
| YTD Growth | +34.6% |
| November 2025 Sales | 6,215 |
| November YoY Change | Nearly 3x increase |
| Norway Nov. Market Growth | +70% YoY |
| Norway Nov. EV Share | 97.6% |
“There is a bit of a car bonanza in Norway at the moment,” OFV CEO Geir Inge Stokke told Reuters.
The Tax Deadline Driving the Frenzy
The record isn’t just about Tesla. Norway’s entire car market surged 70% year-on-year in November as buyers rushed to beat incoming tax changes.
Starting January 1, 2026, Norway will slash its EV VAT exemption threshold from NOK 500,000 (about $43,000) to NOK 300,000 (roughly $26,000). By 2027, the exemption disappears entirely.
For a mid-tier Model Y, industry analysts estimate the tax changes could add approximately $5,400 in 2026 and up to $11,800 by 2027. That’s a powerful incentive to buy now.
The Norwegian Electric Vehicle Association has called the tax hike “a larger tax increase than fossil cars have ever received” and warned it could push some buyers back to combustion engines.
The Musk Paradox
Here’s where the story gets fascinating.
While Tesla’s European sales crater, with registrations down roughly 30% through October y Germany seeing a 60% plunge in June, Norway tells the opposite story.
The backlash against Musk’s support for far-right European parties and his backing of U.S. President Donald Trump has devastated Tesla sales in Sweden (down 81% in April), Denmark, France, and Italy. Yet Norwegian buyers appear largely unmoved.
The Model Y, refreshed earlier this year with updated styling and features, led the charge. Sales of Tesla’s compact crossover surged 213% year-on-year in May and never looked back.
Norway: Tesla’s First International Market
Norway holds a special place in Tesla history. It was the company’s first market outside North America more than a decade ago, built amid some of the world’s most generous EV subsidies.
The country has since become the global model for EV adoption. Fully electric vehicles accounted for 97.6% of all new cars sold in November, putting Norway on track to effectively end combustion engine sales this year.
Back in January, we reported Norway had achieved an unprecedented 89% EV market share for 2024. That figure has only climbed higher.
The Global Picture Remains Grim
Norway’s success can’t mask Tesla’s broader struggles. The Texas-based automaker’s global deliveries are expected to decline 7% this year, according to research consultancy Visible Alpha.
The company faces mounting challenges: an aging product lineup unchanged since 2020, aggressive competition from Chinese manufacturers like BYD, and the ongoing brand damage from Musk’s political controversies.
EVXL’s Take
Let’s be clear about what’s really happening here: Norway’s record is a tax deadline story, not a brand recovery story.
Norwegian buyers aren’t ignoring Musk’s politics because they don’t care. They’re making a cold financial calculation. With potential tax increases of $5,000-$12,000 looming, buying a Tesla in 2025 is simply the rational economic choice.
This is the paradox of subsidy-dependent markets we’ve been warning about. When incentives drive adoption, changes to those incentives trigger market distortions. November’s 70% surge isn’t organic demand, it’s deadline panic.
The real test comes in January 2026. Will Norwegian buyers still choose Tesla when the VAT exemption shrinks? Will the brand withstand market-rate pricing in a country where consumers have more EV choices than anywhere else on Earth?
Norway’s record is a bright spot for Musk, but it may also be a last hurrah before the subsidy party ends. The tax cliff is coming, and we’ll be watching to see whether Tesla’s Norwegian dominance survives the hangover.
What do you think about Tesla’s Norway record? Is this sustainable growth or a subsidy-fueled spike? Share your thoughts in the comments below.
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