If you’re looking for the moment when France’s electric-car transition stopped being theoretical and started looking inevitable, November 2025 might be it. For the first time, electric vehicles grabbed more than 26 percent of new registrations in the country—an eye-opening figure in a market that otherwise looks stuck in neutral.
This didn’t happen because French drivers suddenly woke up and fell in love with kilowatt-hours. It happened because policy, product, and timing finally aligned.
According to Avere, the European Association for Electromobility, France registered 37,723 electric vehicles in November, counting both passenger cars and light commercial vehicles. That’s a 48.5 percent jump over the same month last year. Strip away the vans and fleet noise, and the picture gets even clearer: 34,533 of those were fully electric passenger cars registered by private buyers. In other words, more than one in four new cars bought by individuals in November didn’t burn a drop of gasoline.
That’s not a blip. That’s a shift.
The €100-a-Month Catalyst
The spark came from Paris, not from Silicon Valley or Wolfsburg. In early 2024, the French government rolled out a subsidized EV leasing program aimed squarely at lower-income workers—people who actually need a car to get to their jobs and live at least 15 kilometers away. The headline number was irresistible: monthly payments starting at €100 for small electric cars.
Demand exploded. More than 50,000 applications poured in—more than double what the program’s architects expected. The government hit pause less than a month later, overwhelmed by its own success, with the program officially set to end in 2025.
But the idea was too effective to abandon. In September 2025, the leasing scheme returned, backed by a €370 million financing envelope. Monthly payments now range from roughly €140 to €200 depending on the vehicle and the buyer’s situation, with subsidies capped at €7,000 per car. The target is straightforward: put about 50,000 additional EVs on French roads and, just as importantly, keep the money flowing into European factories.
It’s industrial policy with a charging cable.
Enter the Renault 5 E-Tech
Every movement needs a poster car, and France found its hero in a reboot. The Renault 5 E-Tech—retro-styled, city-sized, and priced to play nicely with subsidies—has become the runaway star of the French EV market.
In November alone, 5,325 Renault 5s found new homes. That’s not just leading the segment; it’s embarrassing the competition. The Peugeot e-208, a solid and familiar alternative, managed 2,072 registrations—less than half the Renault’s total. Third place went to the Renault Scénic, which continues to post steady, if less headline-grabbing, growth.
Production is keeping pace. Renault’s Ampere Electric City plant in Douai is running flat out, having already built more than 100,000 R5 E-Techs in just 15 months. That’s a clear signal that this isn’t a short-term spike—it’s a sustained push.
A Glimpse of the Future
France’s November numbers don’t mean the internal-combustion engine is dead. But they do suggest that, given the right incentives and the right cars, mass EV adoption can happen faster than most forecasts predicted. When affordability stops being the bottleneck, buyers don’t need much convincing.
More than 26 percent EV share in a stagnant market isn’t just a statistic—it’s a warning shot to every automaker and policymaker still betting on slow change. In France, at least, the electric future didn’t arrive quietly. It showed up in volume.
Source: Avere