Charging forward or falling behind? Effects of electric vehicle subsidy removal
Journal article, 2026

To reach climate goals in the transport sector the pace of electrification needs to speed up. Sweden has one of the highest shares of electric vehicles (EV) in the world, and 45% of the EV fleet operates under leasing agreements. In 2018, the Swedish government introduced a bonus for low emission cars and a taxation on fossil-fuelled vehicles. The bonus was however eliminated in November 2022, effective immediately. We show that this led to a significant decline in private leasing of EVs while other market segments remained stable. Private leasing played a key role in expanding the stock of lightweight EVs and dominated new EV registrations among low-income households, which declined following the bonus withdrawal. We also show that the subsidy removal led to a significant increase in EV-leasing prices, making EVs the most expensive option across price segments.

Leasing

Electric vehicles

Subsidies

Sweden

Policy support, mobility

Author

Liv Lundberg

RISE Research Institutes of Sweden

Gustaf Bengtsson

RISE Research Institutes of Sweden

Frances Sprei

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Physical Resource Theory

Niklas Fernqvist

RISE Research Institutes of Sweden

Jonas Zetterholm

RISE Research Institutes of Sweden

Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment

1361-9209 (ISSN)

Vol. 151 105126

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Public Administration Studies

Technology and Environmental History

Economics

Economic Geography

Economic History

DOI

10.1016/j.trd.2025.105126

More information

Latest update

12/19/2025