A busy highway filled with electric vehicles charging at roadside stations for an article about global EV fleet milestone, for article on electric vehicles Norway

Norway becomes world’s first country to have more fully electric cars than gas cars

For the first time in any country’s history, fully electric vehicles now outnumber gasoline-powered cars on Norwegian roads. The Norwegian Road Traffic Information Council (OFV) confirmed the milestone in 2024 C.E., capping a two-decade shift that has quietly rewritten what a national car fleet can look like.

At a glance

  • Electric vehicles Norway: Battery electric cars have surpassed gas cars in total registered units on Norwegian roads, out of a national fleet of roughly 2.87 million passenger vehicles.
  • Gas car decline: Over one million gasoline cars have disappeared from Norwegian roads in the past 20 years, replaced largely by electric models as new EV registrations now account for nearly all new passenger car sales.
  • Diesel timeline: Around one million diesel cars remain registered in Norway — but OFV projects that electric cars could also outnumber diesel vehicles by 2026 C.E. if current replacement rates hold.

Twenty years in the making

The numbers tell a striking story. In 2004 C.E., Norway had more than 1.6 million gasoline cars, roughly 230,000 diesel vehicles, and about 1,000 electric cars. Today those proportions have inverted for gas.

Øyvind Solberg Thorsen, director of OFV, called it “historic — a milestone few saw coming ten years ago.” He credits two main forces: nearly all new passenger cars sold in Norway are now electric, and a large number of classic and enthusiast gasoline cars are only registered during summer months, which pulls the active gas-car count down seasonally.

Norway didn’t arrive here by accident. Decades of consistent policy — purchase incentives, reduced road tolls, free or subsidized charging, and VAT exemptions for EVs — made electric cars the economically rational choice for most buyers long before the rest of the world caught up. Those policies created demand, demand drove infrastructure, and infrastructure removed the anxiety that still slows EV adoption elsewhere.

The diesel chapter isn’t over yet

Surpassing gas cars is one thing. Diesel is a harder challenge. Norway peaked at just over 1.2 million diesel vehicles on the road in 2017 C.E., driven by a decade of favorable tax treatment that started around 2007 C.E. Since then the number has fallen steadily — but a million diesel vehicles still registered today means they will be rolling on Norwegian roads for years.

Diesel engines are durable. Many run well past 200,000 miles, so they don’t cycle out as quickly as gasoline cars. Thorsen projects that the electric fleet could surpass diesel by 2026 C.E., but he is careful to hedge: “Economic fluctuations in relation to car taxes, prices, interest rates, and other factors affect new car sales — both for private individuals and companies.”

OFV forecasts the total vehicle fleet growing from roughly 2.8 million today to about 3.1 million by 2030 C.E. — meaning the transition is happening not just through replacement but through overall growth, with nearly all net additions being electric.

What Norway’s path suggests for other countries

Norway’s population is small — just over five million people — and its oil wealth gave it unusual fiscal flexibility to subsidize the transition. Critics rightly note that not every country can replicate that combination of resources and political will.

But the core lesson may be more transferable than the critics allow. Norway showed that demand responds to price signals, that infrastructure builds confidence, and that once electric vehicles reach a tipping point in new sales, the fleet composition shifts faster than most projections expect. In 2004 C.E., one thousand EVs shared the road with 1.6 million gas cars. In 2024 C.E., electric cars lead that same contest.

The milestone also highlights an unresolved tension: the environmental benefit of electrifying passenger cars depends heavily on the electricity source powering them. Norway generates roughly 90 percent of its electricity from hydropower, giving Norwegian EVs a carbon footprint far lower than the global average. Countries running dirtier grids will see smaller emissions gains from the same transition — at least until their generation mix improves.

The road ahead

Norway’s fleet still contains about one million diesel vehicles, and OFV’s own data shows hybrids holding a meaningful share of the road today. Those vehicles won’t vanish overnight. The transition is real, but it is also incomplete — and the pace of the final stretch depends on factors OFV admits are hard to predict.

What’s clear is that Norway has demonstrated something that once felt theoretical: a wealthy, car-dependent country can restructure its entire passenger fleet around electricity within a generation. Transport researchers across Europe are now watching Norway’s diesel phase-out as closely as they watched the gas phase-out — looking for the policy levers that made one possible and might make the other faster.

Other countries are moving. The U.K. has legislated a ban on new petrol and diesel car sales by 2035 C.E. The E.U. has agreed to the same target. But Norway isn’t waiting for a ban — it got here through incentives, not prohibitions, and it crossed the gas-car threshold before any mandated deadline arrived.

That may be the most instructive part of all.

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For more on this story, see: CleanTechnica

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