Japan EV subsidy: BYD receives 40,000 RMB less than Toyota

In Japan’s auto market, as the Japanese government adjusts the subsidy amounts for purchasing pure electric vehicles (EVs), the situation of one business swinging between boom and bust is likely to persist. Judging from BYD of China, the subsidy amounts for all four models did not increase, falling short of Toyota by 950k yen (about RMB 41.2k). With Japan-made cars as the center, subsidy amounts have been raised one after another, and people involved with imported cars cannot hide their doubts.

The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry of Japan has adjusted the maximum amount for the “Clean Energy Vehicle Introduction and Promotion Subsidy (CEV subsidy).” The EV subsidy cap has been increased by 400k yen, up to a maximum of 1.3 million yen (about RMB 56k). The subsidy for fuel cell vehicles (FCVs) has been reduced by 1.05 million yen, with the maximum set at 1.5 million yen (about RMB 65k).

In response to the related adjustments, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry of Japan said: “We reassessed the subsidy amounts starting from April 2025, conducting an evaluation based on the materials submitted in 2025.” EVs have already been applied since after January, and FCVs will be implemented starting in April.

To continue reading, please click here to go to the Nikkei Chinese Network

_The Japan Economic News agency and the Financial Times merged in November 2015 into the same media group. The alliance formed by two newspapers—one Japanese and one British—both founded in the 19th century is now advancing wide-ranging collaborations such as joint special features under the banner of “high-quality, the most powerful economic journalism.” This time, as part of that effort, the Chinese websites of the two newspapers have arranged article exchanges. _

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