Key Highlights
- March registrations in France surged 203% compared to last year, reaching 9,569 units—just three shy of the December 2023 record of 9,572.
- Strong Nordic performance: Norway up 178%, Sweden climbing 144%, Denmark increasing 96%.
- First-quarter 2026 French registrations totaled 13,945 vehicles, representing a 108% annual increase.
- Sales momentum follows the introduction of more affordable Model Y and Model 3 variants in late 2025.
- Analysts maintain a Hold rating on TSLA with a consensus price target of $395.31.
Tesla’s comeback in European markets gained significant traction during March, as new registration figures from France and Nordic nations revealed a substantial turnaround following challenging conditions throughout 2025.
French markets delivered particularly impressive results. The electric vehicle manufacturer recorded 9,569 new registrations in March, representing a remarkable 203% increase versus the same period twelve months earlier. This performance fell just three vehicles short of the company’s all-time monthly peak of 9,572 units established in December 2023. The March figures also marked France’s first month of positive overall automotive sales growth since October.
For the complete first quarter of 2026, French registrations reached 13,945 units—representing a 108% year-over-year expansion. This constitutes a significant achievement in a territory where the automaker had been experiencing rapid market erosion.
Nordic territories delivered comparable strength. Norwegian registrations jumped 178% to reach 6,150 vehicles. Swedish numbers climbed 144% to 1,447 units, while Danish registrations increased 96% to 1,784. Quarter-over-quarter growth in these markets registered at 95%, 48%, and 50% respectively.
Tesla experienced nearly a 50% reduction in European market share throughout 2025. Multiple challenges converged simultaneously—intensifying competition from Chinese manufacturers such as BYD, a limited product portfolio, and consumer backlash connected to CEO Elon Musk’s political engagement all pressured demand.
The company’s revised, lower-priced Model Y and Model 3 offerings began arriving to European customers during the final months of 2025. February marked the initial month when European registrations returned to positive territory. March data indicates this upward trajectory is continuing.
Quarter-End Registration Patterns
Tesla acknowledged in correspondence to British media outlets last month that registration volumes typically concentrate near each quarter’s conclusion. Vehicle shipments occur in bulk batches, meaning March, June, September, and December inherently display elevated figures. This seasonal pattern deserves consideration when evaluating March’s dramatic increase.
Nevertheless, quarterly aggregates support the monthly acceleration. A 108% expansion in Q1 French registrations represents more than mere quarter-end timing.
Italy, Spain, Portugal, and the Netherlands were scheduled to publish March statistics later Wednesday. Those numbers will provide a more comprehensive view of whether this recovery extends continent-wide or remains limited to specific territories.
Analyst Sentiment and Market Response
TSLA shares advanced 0.87% during pre-market hours following the registration release. Wall Street analysts currently assign the stock a Hold consensus rating, derived from 13 Buy recommendations, 11 Hold ratings, and 7 Sell opinions issued within the last three months.
The mean analyst price target stands at $395.31, suggesting approximately 6.34% potential upside from present trading levels.
