THE UK new car market recorded its ninth successive month of growth in April, with an 11.6 per cent increase to reach 132,990 registrations, according to the latest figures from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders.
The performance marks the best April since 2021's 141,583 units but remains 17.4 per cent down on 2019 volumes.
Large fleet registrations grew by a third (33.1 per cent) to 68,537 units as the market stabilised following weaker volumes last year, while deliveries to private buyers fell by 5.5 per cent to 61,342 units.
Smaller business fleets accounted for 3,111 registrations, rising 13.3 per cent.
Battery electric vehicles remained the second most popular fuel type, with deliveries up by more than half to 20,522 and 15.4 per cent of the market.
Plug-in hybrid vehicles also posted strong growth, up 33.3 per cent with 8,595 registered in the month, while hybrid electric vehicles recorded a 7.7 per cent increase to 15,026 units.
As a result, electrified vehicles accounted for more than onein three registrations in April. Petrol powered cars retained their bestselling status, comprising 58.1 per cent of all registrations.
As supply chain pressures have begun to ease, the overall market is now up 16.9 per cent in the first four months - the best start to a year since the pandemic,with growth worth £3.2 billion.
This has led to an upward revision of the quarterly market outlook, the first positive revision since 2021, with 1.83 million new car registrations expected in 2023, up from 1.79 million anticipated in January. That puts expected market growth this year at 13.5 per cent, which would be the best percentage gain since 1983.
The sector is, however, less optimistic about growth in demand for BEVs, downgrading their expected 2023 market share from 19.7 per cent to 18.4 per cent, with high energy costs and insufficient charging infrastructure anticipated to soften demand.
The latest outlook for 2024,meanwhile, suggests that 22.6 per cent of new car registrations will be BEVs,adownward revision from the 23.3 per cent forecast in January.
With a zero emission vehicle mandate due to come into effect next year, greater and faster investment in infrastructure,and more incentives to encourage purchase areessential todrive consumer confidence and accelerate uptake.
Mike Hawes, SMMT chief executive,said: "The new car market is increasingly bullish, as easing supply chain pressures provide a much-needed boost. However, the broader economic conditions and chargepoint anxiety are beginning to cast a cloud over the market's eagerness to adopt zero emission mobility at the scale and pace needed.
"To ensure all drivers can benefit from electric vehicles, we need everyone - government, local authorities, energy companies and charging providers - to accelerate their investment in the transition and bolster consumer confidence in making the switch."
The best-selling new vehicle in April was the Ford Puma with 3,570 sales followed by the Vauxhall Corsa at 3,203 and the Kia Sportage at 3,073.