Tesla Model 3 is Australia’s best-selling car

If we count the Toyota HiLux and Ford Ranger as the light commercial pickups they are, the best-selling car in Australia in 2023 so far is the Tesla Model 3.

Sales figures for the first month of the year, released by the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries (FCAI), show we bought 2,927 Model 3s in January.

Tesla Model 3 Rear-Wheel Drive
Tesla reduced the price of its Model 3 earlier in 2023.

Not only did this make the Tesla the only pure battery electric vehicle in the sales race top ten, but the only passenger car too. The rest of the list – typical of Australian buying habits – was made up of SUVs and pickups.

The Tesla Model Y SUV, meanwhile, shifted only 286 in January. This, of course, a reflection on availability rather than demand.

Why the strong sales?

Earlier this month Tesla dropped the Model 3’s price by up to $3100, and the Model Y’s by up to $3400. With seemingly every other car manufacturer bumping up prices to reflect more demand than supply, Tesla’s doing well at winning hearts and minds.

On its Australian website there are Model 3s in stock in most states, while delivery times for a custom order is between February and May 2023. If you custom order a Model Y (there are currently none in stock) the delivery estimate is between April and June this year.

Tesla Model Y Rear-Wheel Drive
Tesla Model Y sales were low due to a lack of availability

Such strong availability has certainly aided the Model 3’s surge up the sales charts. The last few months have seen sales figures fluctuate wildly, determined by those delivery ships arriving.

In the previous five months, Model 3 monthly sales have read: 1806, 391, 33, 1610 and 2380. The Model Y, meanwhile, has gone 460, 1805, 1076, 4359 and 1017.

Other EV/PHEV/hybrid sales

The top ten sellers for January 2023 included the MG ZS, which has battery electric variants, and the Mitsubishi Outlander which has the plug-in hybrid PHEV model.

Battery electric, PHEV and hybrid sales combined made up a solid 12 per cent of January’s total market with 10,426 sales.

Full electric vehicles represented almost six per cent (4852 sales), with Tesla accounting for a dominating 3313 of that number.

2022 Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV Aspire
438 plug-in hybrids were sold in January 2023

Conventional hybrid sales were 5136 in January (the vast majority being Toyotas), while PHEVs registered 438 sales.

It’s hard to gauge popularity of a certain model EV due to demand typically overwhelmingly outstripping supply.

Sales numbers jump significantly – such as with the over-subscribed Hyundai Ioniq 5 – when a shipment comes in and the entire stock gets snapped up.

Based on January numbers alone, sales for the likes of Porsche’s Taycan – a car in mighty demand – are sorry indeed.

Battery EV sales for January 2023:

Tesla Model 3 – 2927

Tesla Model Y – 386

BYD Atto 3 – 267

Polestar 2 – 164

BMW iX – 95

Kia EV6 – 44

Nissan Leaf – 39

Audi e-tron GT – 33

Hyundai Ioniq 5 – 30

Mercedes-Benz EQC – 23

Mercedes-Benz EQE – 14

BMW i4 – 12

Mercedes-Benz EQA – 12

Genesis GV60 – 11

BMW i7 – 8

Porsche Taycan – 8

Audi e-tron – 6

Jaguar I-Pace – 4

Mercedes-Benz EQB – 3

Mercedes-Benz EQS – 1

Iain Curry

A motoring writer and photographer for two decades, Iain started in print magazines in London as editor of Performance BMW and features writer for BMW Car, GT Porsche and 4Drive magazines. His love of motor sport and high performance petrol cars was rudely interrupted in 2011 when he was one of the first journalists to drive BMW's 1 Series ActiveE EV, and has been testing hybrids, PHEVs and EVs for Australian newspapers ever since. Based near Noosa in Queensland, his weekly newspaper articles cover new vehicle reviews and consumer advice, while his photography is regularly seen on the pages of glossy magazines.