Skip advert
Advertisement

Motorists are rejecting electric cars, it's clear hybrids are the answer

Mike Rutherford believes motorists will snub electric cars in favour of hybrids for years to come

Mike Rutherford - Motorists are rejecting electric cars, it's clear hybrids are the answer - header

So how often do local councils or national Governments embark on market research aimed at discovering what type of car is right for real-world motorists, their families, budgets, jobs and general lifestyles? The short answer is rarely, if ever. 

Sure, they stage their occasional consultation exercises, which are largely symbolic and hopeless, because the powers that be tend to do what they want, regardless of the priceless feedback they get (but ignore) from car users. The absence of proper consumer research, the presence of increasingly meaningless consultations, and the general contempt politicians have for circa 42 million licence holders combine to lead us to where we are today: them telling consumers to buy pure-electric cars, while 80 per cent-plus of the buying public says no thanks. 

The publication last week of Britain’s official new-car registration figures for 2024 proves the point. They show that, a decade and a half after pure-electric cars arrived in the UK, fewer than two in every 10 buyers bought or leased them over the past 12 months.  

Advertisement - Article continues below

But what these numbers do not mention is what I’m about to reveal: hybrids were the flavour of the year. In full, plug-in hybrid or mild-hybrid guises, 857,151 were registered in 2024, making them the new cars that buyers bought most. And it was the least expensive type – petrol mild hybrids – that was particularly sought after. That’s why and how they saw the largest percentage sales growth (a whopping 23.5 per cent) of any cars in ’24 vs ’23. 

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Pure-petrol models are down but not out, coming second in the table (658,853 bought), then come pure-electrics (381,970), pure-diesel (54,804) and LPG vehicles (1,308).  

What we’re seeing thanks to these hitherto secret sales figures is modern motoring history. The long-awaited tipping point has been reached. Hybrids have proven to be so popular that they quietly outsold the combined might of pure-petrol and pure-diesel cars last year. And they’ll continue to do the same in future, I confidently predict.

At least some of the all-important research the politicians haven’t bothered to do is effectively being done for them here – with my up-to-the-minute confirmation that consumers prefer hybrids in general, and mild hybrids in particular, when spending their hard-earned disposable income on new cars. Can you blame them? I’ve said for years, and will continue to say, that mid-priced hybrids represent the sensible, most convenient, just-about-affordable middle ground as they sit very comfortably between generally cheaper pure-petrol cars and typically more expensive 100 per cent electric models.

For the next five, 10 – possibly even 15 – years, they’ll hit the near-perfect sweet spot for many people buying, insuring and running new cars at their own expense. It’s called compromise. And we need much more of it.

Are hybrid cars the future? Tell us your thoughts in the comments section below...

Skip advert
Advertisement
Chief columnist

Mike was one of the founding fathers of Auto Express in 1988. He's been motoring editor on four tabloid newspapers - London Evening News, The Sun, News of the World & Daily Mirror. He was also a weekly columnist on the Daily Telegraph, The Independent and The Sunday Times. 

Find a car with the experts

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

New Audi TT: electric sports car confirmed for the first time
Audi TT design render (watermarked)

New Audi TT: electric sports car confirmed for the first time

The TT looks set for a sensational comeback thanks to the latest electric technology shared with Porsche
News
16 Apr 2025
Hot new car products: the latest and greatest kit for your car
Osram Night Breaker 220

Hot new car products: the latest and greatest kit for your car

The latest additions to the world of automotive products from floor mats to dash cams...
Product reviews
15 Apr 2025
Buying a used car? Don’t let shoddy build quality catch you out
Opinion - build quality

Buying a used car? Don’t let shoddy build quality catch you out

Ellis Hyde explains why it’s worth paying extra attention to build quality when you’re choosing your next car
Opinion
10 Apr 2025
Hyundai’s N division isn’t axing petrol hot hatchbacks just yet
Hyundai i20 N - front action

Hyundai’s N division isn’t axing petrol hot hatchbacks just yet

Performance division’s VP says that it’s “not true” that the brand is going EV-only, hinting at hybrid-powered models to come
News
4 Apr 2025

Most Popular

Leapmotor B05 family hatch on route to the UK with sub-£30k price and 400-mile range
Leapmotor badge

Leapmotor B05 family hatch on route to the UK with sub-£30k price and 400-mile range

The Stellantis-backed brand will launch a Volkswagen ID.3-rivalling small car with almost 20 per cent more range
News
23 Apr 2025
New Renault Clio prepares for launch: And it's not an EV
Renault Clio Mk6 (camouflaged) - front 3/4 tracking

New Renault Clio prepares for launch: And it's not an EV

The Clio isn’t going anywhere despite the reemergence of the Renault 5
News
22 Apr 2025
New Subaru Outback is “simply unsellable in Europe” for one very simple reason…
Subaru Outback front 2025

New Subaru Outback is “simply unsellable in Europe” for one very simple reason…

Subaru has confirmed that the new seventh-generation Outback will not be coming to the UK, or anywhere in Europe for that matter
News
23 Apr 2025