Image Credit: Xiaomi

Xiaomi Delivers ‘Over 30,000’ EVs in July Reaching a New Monthly Record

China’s tech giant Xiaomi said on Friday it delivered “over 30,000” electric vehicles in July, setting a new monthly record in its first month offering two models.

The Beijing-based technology company, which began deliveries of its second model, the YU7 sedan, in early July, crossed the milestone of 300,000 cumulative deliveries less than 18 months after handing over its first vehicle.

The company had reported “over 25,000” deliveries in June and delivered approximately 157,000 vehicles in the first half of 2025.

Xiaomi started deliveries of its debut model, the SU7 sedan, in April 2024. By the end of the year, it had delivered 135,000 vehicles in China. The first 100,000 vehicles delivered by the brand were recorded in November.

The tech giant took eight months to deliver its first 100,000 units, and four months more to reach another hundred thousand. In March, the company announced it handed over its 200,000th electric vehicle.

Xiaomi aims for its 2025 deliveries to reach 350,000 units. As of the time of writing, the automaker has reached about 53% of the guidance.

In late June, the company officially launched its second model, the YU7 — , set to rival Tesla‘s Model Y in China. The model starts at 253,500 yuan ($35,400), 10,000 yuan lower than the US brand’s sedan.

The SUV broke all previous records for a car launch in China by securing 200,000 pre-orders in just three minutes. In just 18 hours, the YU7 had 240,000 locked-in orders.

Nvidia’s chief executive officer, Jensen Huang, said that Xiaomi‘s co-founder and CEO Lei Jun showed him the new YU7 SUV while he was visiting China earlier last month.

According to Nvidia‘s chief, it has “incredible technology” and “beautiful design.” Huang added that he “really wants to buy a Xiaomi car, but unfortunately it is not available in the United States.”

The estimated delivery time for Xiaomi vehicles currently starts from a minimum waiting period of 38 weeks — as production is only starting to ramp up. Some trims of the SU7 can reach up to 52 weeks.

Earlier last month, the company has registered its first ever vehicle in Europe, as the company plans to start sales outside China from 2027, according to its president Lu Weibing.

The vehicle is a SU7 Ultra, registered in Munich, Germany — where Xiaomi has established an R&D center earlier this year, according to a report by local media outlet 36kr.

Matilde is a Law-backed writer who joined CARBA in April 2025 as a Junior Reporter.