Used EV Sales Jump in Europe as Iran War Drives up Fuel Prices
On March 26, 2026, Reuters reported that petrol price spikes triggered by the war in Iran are boosting used electric vehicle sales across Europe, in an early sign that pain at the pump is pushing consumers away from combustion engines.
“There is currently an electric car bonanza in the used market,” Terje Dahlgren told Reuters, an analyst at Norway’s largest used-car marketplace Finn.no, adding that EVs have recently overtaken diesel models as the site’s best-selling fuel type.
The war, which erupted on February 28, has disrupted a vital shipping route that carries roughly 20% of global oil supplies. That has fed straight through to filling-station prices, with the average cost of petrol in the European Union rising 12% to 1.84 euros ($2.12) per litre from February 23 to March 16, according to European Commission data.
French online used-car retailer Aramisauto said its share of EV sales almost doubled from the week starting February 16 to the week starting March 9, rising to 12.7% from 6.5%. The company, majority-owned by automaker Stellantis, saw a similar shift in 2022 when Russia invaded Ukraine and energy prices spiked.

“As soon as you pass 2 euros per litre of petrol, it makes a lasting impression on people’s minds,” Aramisauto CEO Romain Boscher told Reuters. “We are seeing a significant rise in interest on the website, translating into orders for EVs and hybrids.”
Over the same three weeks, petrol models on Aramisauto fell to 28% of sales from 34%, while diesels dropped to 10% from 14%.
If U.S. and European fuel prices remain elevated, new-car buyers are also expected to gravitate toward EVs and hybrids. EV makers are already highlighting the cost of petrol in their marketing. In France, MG, owned by China’s SAIC, is running social media ads declaring “it may be time to rethink the way you drive.”
Consumers appear to be responding. Amsterdam-based OLX said customer inquiries for EVs have jumped across its marketplaces in France (50%), Romania (40%), Portugal (54%) and Poland (39%), with growth “accelerating consistently week-over-week across all markets.”
“What’s particularly telling is that EV interest was already trending upward before recent events,” OLX CEO Christian Gisy said to Reuters. “The instability appears to have accelerated a transition that was already underway.”
Europe’s used-EV landscape has also broadened. A wider range of models and the spread of battery-health certificates have helped address buyer concerns about second-hand EVs, supporting sales even before the war began.
Used EV sales tend to react quickly to shifts in sentiment or sharp moves in petrol prices because they are up to 40% cheaper than new models and are readily available to drive off the lot, unlike new cars that often take months to deliver.
“Considering the lead time of a vehicle purchase, we expect this momentum to continue as the market fully absorbs the impact of recent global events,” said Alastair Campbell to Reuters, vice president of growth at British automotive data firm Marketcheck.
In the Nordics, the largest used-car websites are also seeing a sharp rise in EV sales. At Swedish platform Blocket, EV sales rose 11% in the first two weeks of March versus the previous two weeks, while views of EV models increased 17%.
“We see a clear shift where more people are actively looking for more fuel-efficient alternatives,” said Blocket car expert Marcin Stepman to Reuters.
Denmark shows a similar pattern. Local used-car platform Bilbasen has reported rising searches for EVs, with analyst Jan Lang citing higher petrol prices as the main driver.
In Germany, mobile.de, the country’s largest online car market, said the share of EV searches on its website has tripled since the start of March, from 12% to 36%, while car dealers have received 66% more inquiries for used EVs than in February.
“Currently, high gasoline prices are leading to an increasing demand for electromobility,” mobile.de said to Reuters.

Electric Vehicle Marketing Consultant, Writer and Editor. Publisher EVinfo.net.
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