Complete Story
 

07/13/2026

JD Power: More New-Vehicle Shoppers Consider EVs as Fuel Costs Rise

Source: Fleet Management Weekly

Purchase Price Becomes Bigger Barrier to EV Adoption


Electric vehicle (EV) sales volumes may have plateaued, but consumer interest has not faded, according to the JD Power 2026 U.S. Electric Vehicle Consideration (EVC) Study,SM. In fact, the recent surge in gas prices has helped to boost consideration, with 26% of new-vehicle shoppers saying they were “very likely” to consider purchasing an EV in April—up 3 percentage points from the previous month. Meanwhile, the share of shoppers saying they were “very unlikely” to consider an EV fell 4 percentage points month over month to 18% in April. That April bump in consideration helped drive the overall percentage of new-vehicle shoppers who say they are “very likely to consider an EV to 25% (up 1 percentage point year over year) in 2026, while 35% are “somewhat likely,” unchanged from a year ago.

“Despite ongoing policy changes, including the repeal of federal tax credits, a growing number of new-vehicle shoppers remain interested in EVs,” said Brent Gruber, executive director of OEM and EV solutions at JD Power. “At the same time, there continues to be gradual but important progress in key rejection reasons among shoppers such as purchase price, charging availability and range anxiety over the long term. Taken together, these trends offer automakers—and other stakeholders across the EV ecosystem—a clearer view of where barriers are easing and where friction remains, helping prioritize the areas in which to focus product, infrastructure and investment strategies moving forward.”


Following are some key findings of the 2026 index:  


The EVC Study, now in its sixth year, is an industry benchmark focusing on gauging fully electric or battery electric vehicle shopper consideration. Study content includes overall EV consideration by geography; demographics; vehicle experience and use; lifestyle; and psychographics. It also includes model-level consideration details, such as “why buy” findings and analysis of reasons for EV rejection. By delivering both long- and short-term monthly data on the trends influencing consumer interest in EVs, the EVC Study gives automobile industry stakeholders the most current view possible of ebbs and flows in demand, helping them execute timely market education and customer engagement strategies. This year’s study measures responses from 8,154 consumers who intend to buy or lease a new vehicle in the next 12 months and was fielded from January through April 2026.


For more information about the U.S. Electric Vehicle Consideration (EVC) Study, click here

[1] JD Power defines generational groups as Pre-Boomers (born before 1946); Boomers (1946-1964); Gen X (19651976); Gen Y (1977-1994); and Gen Z (1995-2008).

Printer-Friendly Version