All-Electric Nissan Leaf Hits 400,000 Units Globally, Sets EV Sales Record

Illustration of Nissan Leaf EV hitting 400,000 in sales.
Illustration of Nissan Leaf EV hitting 400,000 in sales.

The Nissan Leaf today became the first electric car in history to surpass 400,000 worldwide sales. Introduced in 2010 as the world’s first mass-market electric vehicle, the Leaf has now covered more than 6 billion miles, saving nearly 4 million gallons of oil per year. And this is just the beginning: Available in 50 markets globally, the Leaf is expanding to six new markets in Latin America and seven in Asia and Oceania this year.

“This milestone is a powerful statement that 400,000 customers, and counting, value the Nissan LEAF for the excitement, confidence and connection it delivers,” said Executive Vice President Daniele Schillaci, Nissan’s global head of marketing, sales and electric vehicles.

The all-new Leaf e+, with a range of 226 miles and MSRP of $36,550 (base trim & before applicable rebates), will be on sale at retailers nationwide this month.

Less than a decade ago, electric cars were seen as a niche product, and Leaf customers were mostly “early adopters.” Today, a growing number of consumers say their next car may be electric. And regulators, utilities, landlords, retailers are listening, as evidenced by EV charging stations popping up everywhere.

For tips on how EVs and EV charging can help your community, neighborhood, and place of business, please contact me. I also invite you to subscribe to receive future posts via email, view my other posts, and follow me on Twitter.

Scroll to Top