Toyota Reports 5% April Sales Increase
Uptick driven by demand for hybrids and gasoline-powered cars.

Toyota hybrid vehicles like the Toyota Prius are selling strong.
Pixabay
Toyota Motor Corp. announced a nearly 5% year-over-year increase in global sales in April.
The automaker attributes the spike to stronger demand for hybrid and gasoline-powered vehicles in Japan and China.
The Japanese automaker also reported improved overseas sales of battery electric vehicles, surpassing 2022’s results for the first four months of the year.
Toyota sold 800,863 vehicles worldwide in April, including its luxury brand Lexus. That marks a 4.9% increase a year earlier, when sales were heavily impacted by parts supply shortages driven by the pandemic.
Hybrid sales, such as the new Prius, surged in Japan, recording a 59.2% year-over-year jump. Hybrids accounted for over half of the 125,326 vehicles sold in the domestic market in April, outpacing the 21.5% overall rise in Toyota's domestic car sales.
In China, Toyota saw a 46.3% year-over-year increase in sales, reaching 162,554 units. The sales recovery reflects a rebound from the pandemic-related challenges experienced in the previous year.
The automaker also achieved a significant milestone, selling 8,584 battery EVs globally, including those under the Lexus brand. That accounts for over 1% of Toyota's global sales in a single month, marking the first time the automaker surpassed that threshold. Toyota sold a total of 26,057 battery-powered vehicles from January to April, surpassing the 24,466 battery EVs sold in 2022.
Toyota's robust April sales performance shows growing demand for hybrid and gasoline-powered vehicles in Japan and China. The automaker’s increased focus on battery EVs is also paying off with rising sales, contributing to a positive start to the year.
Originally posted on Auto Dealer Today
More Product & Technology

Car Karaoke Gets Official Platform
The in-vehicle karaoke and sing-along platform by Samsung arm is meant to add traveling enjoyment safely in technology that automakers can tailor to their specific needs.
Read More →
Kia Embraces Clean Energy
A Kia Georgia partnership combines weather protection and renewable energy in a new solar canopy system at Kia’s West Point facility.
Read More →
Honda-Sony Venture Dismantled
For nearly four years, the companies had worked toward the launch of the electric-vehicle brand’s first two models, but the shifting EV market scuttled the plans.
Read More →
Wireless EV Charging is on the Horizon
In what Porsche says is an industry first, its 2026 Cayenne is joining the automaker’s electric SUV lineup with an optional inductive charging system that can be purchased with the vehicle.
Read More →
EV Battery Cycle Life at Risk
Fast charging of electric vehicles provides a solution for range anxiety, but it also poses a risk to battery cycle life due to increased temperatures, according to an EV supply chain data provider.
Read More →
Automaker Increases Parts Recycling
Stellantis is adding a third end-of-life vehicle dismantling facility to feed its growing reuse business sparked in large part by autos’ growing lifespans.
Read More →
Charging Challenges
An annual J.D. Power study finds eroding home EV charging contentment, though there are ways owners can boost theirs. The firm sees auto dealers playing a role.
Read More →
Safety Drives Insurance Rates
Sixteen out of the 20 cheapest vehicles to insure in 2026 are SUVs, according to CarInsurance.com, largely because of their safety features and lower repair costs.
Read More →
Report Finds Year-End F&I Strength
Deal volume ebbed and flowed throughout 2025, but product performance remained steady, according to automotive technology and data intelligence solutions provider StoneEagle.
Read More →
AAMS Training and Mosaic Compliance Services Merge
The strategic combination is intended to expand technology-driven compliance solutions for the automotive industry.
Read More →