Honda’s decision to kill its three EVs for the U.S. market is being reported as a market correction: demand softened, tariffs bit, so the company is pivoting to hybrids. The editorial stance is different. Retreating now cedes the next decade to rivals and leaves Honda dependent on policies it cannot control.
Honda Killing Its EVs Is a Bet Against Regulators and Buyers That Will Backfire
According to techcrunch.com and Honda’s own March 2026 announcement, the company is scrapping the Honda 0 Series Saloon, Honda 0 Series SUV, and Acura RSX EV that were scheduled for production at the Ohio EV Hub later in 2026. Techcrunch.com reported that Honda blamed tariffs, Chinese competition, and the rollback of EV incentives under the Trump administration. The company will take a charge of up to 2.5 trillion yen (about $15.7 billion), leading to its first annual net loss since going public in 1957, as reported by Yahoo Finance, Business Insider, and DW. CEO Toshihiro Mibe and other executives are forgoing part of their pay. The frame in much of the coverage is that Honda is adapting to reality. The bet underneath is that regulators and buyers will not push back toward electrification; that bet will backfire.
Honda has a long history in electrification. According to Honda’s heritage and InsideEVs, the company researched EVs from the late 1980s, launched the EV Plus in 1997, the Fit EV in 2012, and the Clarity and Honda e in the 2010s. The Ohio EV Hub represented billions in committed investment; techcrunch.com and Engadget note that the three canceled models were months from production. Pulling out now does not just “pause” EV rollout—it abandons product and architecture and hands the next decade’s growth in software-defined and battery-electric vehicles to competitors who are not stepping back. Techcrunch.com and AP News report that Honda is delaying its EV rollout by about five years and cutting electrification investment from 10 trillion to 7 trillion yen through 2031. That is a bet that policy and consumer preference will stay favourable to hybrids and unfavourable to full EVs. If regulation tightens again or buyers shift back toward EVs, Honda will be playing catch-up.
The company is not alone. Business Insider and others report that Stellantis, Ford, GM, and Volkswagen have taken massive EV-related write-downs, totalling tens of billions. But framing Honda’s move as “following the market” misses the strategic risk. Honda is betting that the current U.S. policy mix and demand softness are permanent enough to justify walking away from models that were almost in showrooms. Rivals in China and elsewhere are not stopping; they are gaining in software-defined vehicles and cost. Honda itself has stated it cannot match the value and flexibility of Chinese EV makers, as DW and Engadget report. Retreating from EVs does not fix that gap—it defers it and leaves the company more dependent on hybrids and on political cycles that can reverse.
Reuters and other outlets have reported Honda scaling back EV investment and focusing on hybrids; the company has also paused a large EV investment in Canada and shifted Civic Hybrid production to Indiana to avoid tariffs. The pattern is consistent: short-term policy and cost pressures are driving decisions that lock in a smaller EV role for years. When and if regulation or consumer demand shifts back toward stronger electrification, Honda will be dependent on policies it did not shape and on catching up to competitors who did not retreat. That is why the move is a bet against regulators and buyers—and why it will backfire if the bet is wrong.
What This Actually Means
Honda’s pullback from EVs is framed as a market correction. The editorial view is that retreating now cedes the next decade to rivals and ties Honda to policies it cannot control. If regulators or buyers swing back toward electrification, Honda will be behind. The bet against regulators and buyers will backfire.
What Is Honda’s EV History and Why Does This Pivot Matter?
Honda is a Japanese multinational automotive manufacturer headquartered in Tokyo. It has been involved in electric and electrified vehicles for decades, from early research in the 1980s to the EV Plus and beyond: the EV Plus (1997), Fit EV (2012), Clarity series (2017), and Honda e (2020). The company had committed to the “Honda 0 Series” and to a significant Ohio EV Hub. Killing the three U.S.-bound EVs and taking a $15.7 billion hit is not a tweak; it is a strategic retreat. The pivot matters because it leaves Honda with a smaller EV footprint just as Chinese and other rivals are advancing in software-defined and battery-electric cars. Relying on hybrids and hoping policy stays relaxed is a bet that may not hold—and if it does not, Honda will be playing catch-up.
Sources
techcrunch.com, Yahoo Finance, Business Insider, DW, AP News