Gen Z Consumers Are Warming Up To The Idea Of Chinese EVs


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US consumers may not admit it, but they’re getting very interested in Chinese EVs. Part of the curiosity arises as neighboring countries court trade deals to bring more affordable vehicles westward. For example, during a January visit to Beijing, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney agreed to admit a small number of Chinese imports into the country for the first time.

Such developments may mark a turning point for the US auto industry, says David M. Hart, senior fellow for climate and energy at the Council for Foreign Affairs. If US isolationist policies continue, the US may find itself outside looking in at a global market increasingly dominated by China.

Adding to the EV intrigue is the news that 69% of Gen Z car shoppers say they are “more likely” to consider a Chinese brand. The analysis from Cox Automotive indicates that this young consumer group, with their emphasis on value, experience, and novelty, may be offering an early signal of shifting consumer motivation — so much so that auto dealers need to listen a lot more closely about their interest in Chinese EVs.

The Cox Automotive research also reveals a fragmented US vehicle market, limited brand awareness, and a wide gap between consumer curiosity and dealer readiness. “This polarization suggests early traction would be concentrated — not broad-based — creating both opportunity for targeted entry and vulnerability for specific incumbents,” the authors of the Cox Automotive survey conclude. “Understanding who sits on each side of the divide is critical as entry timelines move from ‘if’ to ‘when.’”

The findings illustrate how divided the US automotive consumer marketplace really is. Taken together, the Cox Automotive survey data indicates that it may take a lot more than low prices for Chinese brands to succeed if they enter the US market.

Younger, EV-oriented shoppers show meaningful openness, while older and domestic-loyal buyers remain resistant. Gen Z are actively reevaluating where they spend, why they spend, and what earns their loyalty. This population is more open to change and innovation than their parents and grandparents. For example, 70% of Gen Z have used AI tools in the last year for budgeting, planning, and shopping. Many dealers have yet to unlock the quality and connectivity of AI-generated data to make smarter decisions, match personalization, and offer seamless buying experiences.

Consumer perceptions of Chinese automotive brands skew most positively toward value, while dealers focus more on reliability, safety, and long-term viability. For many in the Gen Z consumer group, the product is a starting point: they analyze a brand’s value, ethics, and long-term impact. Understanding the Gen Z perspective about value is important — this group’s spending power is expected to grow to $12 trillion by 2030, according to NielsenIQ and GfK in collaboration with World Data Lab projects. Chinese EVs in Europe and Asia sell at significantly lower price points and could become very appealing to Gen Z buyers if available in the US.

Tesla’s Model Y stands apart among EVs. While Tesla and Chevrolet are still chosen more often overall, Chinese models gain ground quickly as price becomes the dominant decision factor, especially among lower‑income buyers and more price‑sensitive segments. Trade‑off exercises show that a meaningful share of shoppers are willing to defect from US brands when Chinese EVs are offered at deep discounts.

Nearly half of consumers say they are familiar with Chinese auto brands, yet only 17% know about the most recognizable Chinese brand: BYD. The deep ambition of Chinese EV manufacturers specifically and Asian retailers in general to create a significant physical footprint in the US is fortified by their recent and rapid expansion rates. They’re intent on building brand recognition and moving quickly to open EV showrooms and stores, says Eva Niu, Xiaomi’s head of retail for western Europe. In the US, though, 100% tariffs on Chinese EVs and restrictions on Chinese vehicle technology and software are the result about concerns from US automakers and policymakers about competitive pricing pressure and data security risks.

In direct comparisons with Chinese brands, US brands maintain an edge — but not an unbreakable one. Gen Z expects companies to take genuine positions on social issues, and more than half of Gen Z and millennials identify climate change as a top concern. To them, sustainability is much more important than a recognizable brand, and EVs are important signifiers of the technological innovations necessary to stop the planet from further warming. Indeed, among all generations, Gen Z is disproportionately carrying the personal and emotional burden of the climate crisis.

About 40% of consumers surveyed support allowing Chinese automotive brands to enter the US market. By comparison, only 15% of dealers say they support such an entry — but 70% of dealers would change their strategies to stay competitive if Chinese brands entered the US. When Chinese brands are hypothetically paired with an established US automaker, consumer consideration jumps to 76%. This suggests brand alignment could matter just as much as pricing. For now, Chinese EVs aren’t available in most US showrooms. It would take a cooling of trade hostilities and new US/ China partnerships to surface.

Gen Z buyers could be the game changer.

Who Is In Gen Z, & What’s Necessary For The Automotive Marketplace To Reach Them?

People born between 1997 and 2012, titled Gen Z, make up approximately 30% of the global population. With an age range from 13 to 28 years old, they’re the first generation to never know life without smartphones and social media. That makes Gen Z a digitally native generation, and they love spending time online. But their online time is not static; in fact, this group has evolved in how they use social media platforms, what they trust, and what they expect from brands.

Gen Z trusts peer reviews and real user experiences over traditional advertising. In fact, a majority cite user comments and ratings as deciding factors in purchases. Gen Z’s path to purchase is now an infinite loop that begins with inspiration and moves to exploration, community, and loyalty. Reaching Gen Z’s curiosity about Chinese EVs is crucial, because, as Stuart Gardner writes for Generation 180, “Every EV added to the road, whether new or used, displaces tailpipe emissions and advances our collective progress toward cleaner air and a more stable climate.”


Resources

  • “3 major trends that will reshape retail In 2026.” Catherine Erdly. Forbes. December 22, 2025.
  • “Chinese auto brands: What US consumers and dealers think.” Cox Automotive. February 25, 2026.
  • “How we adapted our marketing strategies for Gen Z in 2026.” David Roman. We are Brain.  January 5, 2026.
  • “Spend Z: A global report.” 2026 Nielsen Consumer LLC.
  • “The Chinese are coming.” Mark Faithfull. The Robin Report. January 26, 2026.
  • “The used EV resurgence is coming–and that’s great news for consumers and the climate.” Stuart Gardner. Generation 180. March 4, 2026.
  • “What Canadian and Mexican EV imports from China mean for the United States.” David M. Hart. Council for Foreign Relations. February 9, 2026.

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