Xiaomi said on Thursday it delivered “more than 50,000” electric vehicles in its first full year of production, as the brand continues to break records as a newcomer in the automotive industry.
Since September, the tech giant has consecutively delivered “over 40,000” vehicles per month as it prepares to launch its first extended-range model.
However, the Beijing-based company does not disclose exact monthly figures.
“On the first day of the new year, here’s an update on the latest delivery progress: In December 2025, Xiaomi Auto delivered more than 50,000 vehicles. Thank you all for your choice and support!” the company wrote on Weibo this Thursday.
Xiaomi‘s quarterly figures become known when the tech giant reports its financial results.
Considering the official numbers revealed in the latest earnings report, the brand delivered 265,967 EVs in the first nine months of 2025, with 108,796 EVs delivered in the third quarter alone.
Xiaomi needed to deliver over 54,000 units in December to reach its 2025 sales target, which was recently increased from 350,000 to 400,000 units.
Exact figures will only be disclosed in the coming days when China’s Passenger Car Association reports the country’s NEV industry sales data.
The initial target of 300,000 units, set at the beginning of the year, was reached between October and November.
Production and Performance Milestones
In late November Xiaomi announced that its 500,000th vehicle rolled off the production line in Beijing, a remarkable milestone for a brand that only entered the automotive industry 19 months ago.
By then, the company’s co-founder and CEO Lei Jun increased the delivery target for the second time this year.
In March, the CEO had increased Xiaomi‘s delivery guidance from 300,000 to 350,000 vehicles.
This time, the company added another 50,000 units to a total of 400,000 vehicles.
Earlier this year, following the launch of the SU7 Ultra, a prototype achieved a Nürburgring lap time of 6:22.091, setting a record at the German racetrack.
The production version later set a production-car record of 7:04.957, which was only recently surpassed by BYD’s Yangwang U9X with a lap time of 6:59.157.
SU7 Success and YU7 Launch
The tech giant, which launched its EV unit in late March 2024, topped the charts in China with its debut model, the SU7 sedan.
For most of the year, the model outperformed sales of its main competitor, the Tesla Model 3, having first registered higher monthly sales in December last year.
However, when a new version of the Model 3 with a longer range was introduced in the summer, the sales gap between the two models decreased.
In late June, Xiaomi launched its second model, the YU7 SUV, set to compete with Tesla’s best-selling Model Y.
The model broke an industry record, securing over 200,000 confirmed orders in just 3 minutes. It had 240,000 locked-in orders in just 18 hours.
The company has been ramping up production on both its SU7 (and the performance SU7 Ultra, launched in late February) and YU7 models, for which delivery waiting times reached up to 52 weeks.
Xiaomi is expanding its EV plant in Beijing and, according to a recent report by local outlet Lanjinger, the company has been able to reduce waiting times by up to two months.
According to data published by Xiaomi on Wednesday, the SU7 led cumulative sales in the over-200,000 yuan ($28,600) sedan segment over the past twelve months, while its YU7 has topped mid-to-large SUV sales for four consecutive months.
Lineup Update
Several spy shots have recently surfaced of Xiaomi‘s upcoming third model, internally codenamed ‘Kunlun.’
It is expected to be the brand’s first range-extended SUV, with its official launch planned for next year. The model was first spotted roadtesting in mid-July.
Rumors circulating last month on Chinese social media have noted that it will likely feature three trims with different battery options.
A fourth model, internally codenamed ‘Man Island,’ is reportedly in development, although the brand has not confirmed its production. It is expected to cover an outdoor-focused segment.
Earlier this week, local media outlet 36Kr reported that the company will launch four new models next year, which include a new iteration and an executive version of the debut SU7.
Additionally, the report detailed that two extended-range SUVs are expected to debut next year — one five-seat and one seven-seat — with the latter scheduled for launch in the first half of the year.
Throughout 2025, Xiaomi opened 477 auto stores across 138 cities, along with 264 service centers in 151 cities.
According to the company, 91.26% of users actively use its assisted driving system, and Xiaomi vehicles have accumulated over 6.7 billion kilometers of total driving mileage.








