Toyota’s Canadian showrooms are beginning to look very different from only a few years ago. As of June 17, 2026, the automaker said hybrid, plug-in hybrid and battery-electric models accounted for 64% of Toyota-brand sales in Canada so far this year. That does not mean nearly two-thirds of buyers are choosing fully electric vehicles. It does show that electrified powertrains have moved from a specialized corner of the lineup into the centre of Toyota’s business.
The shift is being driven by familiar vehicles rather than a single breakthrough model. Hybrid versions of the RAV4, Corolla and Camry are carrying much of the volume, while newer plug-in and battery-electric models are widening the choices available to Canadian households.
The 64% Figure Marks a Rapid Change
Toyota’s latest figure represents a notable jump from the company’s 2025 results. Last year, the Toyota division sold 104,620 electrified vehicles in Canada, equal to 48.4% of its total sales. By May 2026, electrified vehicles represented 71% of Toyota-division sales for that month, helping lift the year-to-date mix to the 64% level reported in mid-June. In practical terms, a powertrain once associated mainly with the Prius is now appearing across sedans, crossovers, minivans, trucks and sport-utility vehicles.
The pace matters because Toyota is not relying on a shrinking overall business to make the percentage look larger. Toyota Canada reported 24,633 Toyota-brand sales in May, up 6.7% from a year earlier, while Toyota Canada Inc., which includes Lexus, sold 27,704 vehicles. The company’s May electrified total reached a record 19,403 units, 50.3% higher than in May 2025. Electrification is therefore expanding alongside overall volume, not merely replacing sales lost elsewhere in the lineup.
Hybrids Still Carry Most of the Load
The word “electrified” covers several very different technologies. Toyota includes conventional hybrids, plug-in hybrids and battery-electric vehicles in the category. Conventional hybrids cannot be plugged in and still use gasoline, although an electric motor and battery can reduce fuel consumption. Plug-in hybrids can travel a limited distance on electricity before operating as hybrids, while battery-electric vehicles rely entirely on stored electricity.
Toyota Canada Inc.’s first-quarter numbers show how important that distinction is. The company sold 29,415 electrified Toyota and Lexus vehicles in the first three months of 2026, but 9,379 met its zero-emission-vehicle grouping, which included battery-electric, plug-in hybrid and fuel-cell models. That means roughly 20,000 units, or about 68% of the electrified total, were conventional hybrids. The pattern also fits the wider market: Statistics Canada reported that Canadian hybrid registrations rose 36.1% in 2025, even as battery-electric and plug-in hybrid registrations declined. Hybrids remain the easiest electrified step for drivers who cannot regularly charge at home or work.
The RAV4 Sits at the Centre of the Strategy
Toyota’s most important electrified vehicle in Canada is not an unfamiliar experiment. It is the RAV4, a mainstream compact SUV that has already become part of daily life for families, commuters and small businesses. Toyota sold 75,573 RAV4s in Canada in 2025, making it the country’s best-selling passenger vehicle excluding pickup trucks. That scale gives Toyota a powerful way to move electrified technology into the mass market without asking customers to adopt an entirely new type of vehicle.
The redesigned 2026 RAV4 is now offered through electrified powertrains, and its Canadian-built hybrid version posted its best month ever in May. Sales were up 113.3% from a year earlier, following another record in April. The manufacturing connection strengthens the Canadian story: Toyota said its Canadian plants assembled 537,518 vehicles in 2025, making Toyota Motor Manufacturing Canada the country’s largest auto manufacturer that year. A buyer choosing a RAV4 Hybrid is therefore participating in both Toyota’s electrification push and a major Canadian manufacturing operation.
Toyota’s Battery-Electric Lineup Is Expanding
Toyota has often been criticized for moving more cautiously into fully electric vehicles than some rivals, but its Canadian battery-electric range is broadening in 2026. The company says Canadians will be able to choose from 21 electrified Toyota models by year-end, including four distinct battery-electric options. That is a much wider offering than the period when the bZ4X was effectively Toyota’s only mainstream all-electric entry.
The new C-HR is positioned as the entry model, starting at $44,900 and offering up to 496 kilometres of estimated range in front-wheel-drive form. The refreshed bZ starts at $45,990 and is rated for up to 486 kilometres, while the more rugged bZ Woodland offers up to 452 kilometres, 375 horsepower and a 3,500-pound towing rating. A three-row electric Highlander is also expected later in 2026 as a 2027 model, with up to 511 kilometres of range. Together, those vehicles address several of the gaps that previously made Toyota’s EV lineup feel narrow, particularly for buyers seeking family space, all-wheel drive or towing ability.
Plug-In Hybrids Offer a Practical Middle Ground
Toyota is also placing a larger bet on plug-in hybrids, which can cover shorter trips on electricity while retaining a gasoline engine for longer journeys. The 2026 RAV4 Plug-in Hybrid offers up to 89 kilometres of electric range, 324 horsepower and a starting price of $48,750. The Prius Plug-in Hybrid provides up to 72 kilometres of electric range and a combined hybrid fuel-consumption rating of 4.5 litres per 100 kilometres, with pricing starting at $40,050.
Those numbers help explain the format’s appeal. A household with predictable weekday driving could complete many commutes or errands without using gasoline, yet still leave for a long weekend without planning every charging stop. Canadian buyers appear to be responding: RAV4 Plug-in Hybrid sales set a May record and rose 277.2% year over year, while the Prius Plug-in also achieved a May sales record. Plug-in hybrids are more mechanically complex than either conventional hybrids or full EVs, but for drivers balancing winter travel, limited charging access and fuel costs, they can function as a bridge rather than a compromise.
Quebec Is Driving an Outsized Share of Demand
Toyota chose Quebec for its June “Unplug and Drive” event for a reason. The province accounted for more than one-third of the Toyota battery-electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles sold in Canada so far in 2026, making it the company’s strongest provincial market for zero-emission sales. Journalists tested the C-HR, bZ, bZ Woodland, RAV4 Plug-in Hybrid and Prius Plug-in Hybrid there, placing Toyota’s newest products in the region where demand is already most established.
The provincial pattern is visible beyond Toyota. Statistics Canada reported that Quebec’s new zero-emission-vehicle registrations rose 42.1% year over year in the first quarter of 2026, the strongest increase among the provinces with published comparisons. Transport Canada’s 2025 dashboard also showed zero-emission vehicles at 18.5% of Quebec’s new light-duty market, compared with 6.8% in Ontario and 4.4% in Alberta. Those figures make Quebec a useful preview of how demand could develop as more electrified models become readily available elsewhere in Canada.
Incentives and Policy Are Reshaping the Market
Canada’s policy environment changed significantly in early 2026. The federal government announced that it would repeal the Electric Vehicle Availability Standard and replace it with more stringent, technology-neutral greenhouse-gas standards for model years 2027 through 2032. Ottawa said the new framework is expected to support a 75% electric-vehicle adoption rate by 2035, with an aspirational goal of 90% by 2040. That approach gives automakers more flexibility to use hybrids and other technologies in the earlier years.
At the same time, the federal Electric Vehicle Affordability Program brought purchase support back for qualifying vehicles. Eligible battery-electric and fuel-cell vehicles can receive up to $5,000, while plug-in hybrids can receive up to $2,500. The general transaction-value ceiling is $50,000, with different treatment for Canadian-made EVs, and the five-year program has funding of up to $2.3 billion with a goal of supporting more than 840,000 vehicles. Toyota’s C-HR and bZ both start below $46,000, although final eligibility depends on the specific vehicle, transaction price and federal list.
What the 64% Number Does — and Does Not — Prove
Toyota’s result shows that Canadian buyers are increasingly comfortable with some form of electric assistance, but it should not be read as evidence that gasoline has nearly disappeared from the company’s sales. Conventional hybrids still burn fuel and do not count as zero-emission vehicles under the federal definition. Nationally, zero-emission vehicles represented 10.8% of new registrations in the first quarter of 2026—far below Toyota’s broader 64% electrified figure.
That gap is the essence of Toyota’s strategy. The company has put more than 660,000 electrified Toyota vehicles on Canadian roads and says it has sold more than 35 million worldwide, largely by spreading hybrid technology across high-volume models. Globally, Reuters reported that hybrids accounted for 42% of Toyota’s parent-company sales in 2025, while battery-electric vehicles made up 1.9%. Toyota’s Canadian performance therefore demonstrates leadership in electrification broadly defined, not dominance in fully electric vehicles. The next test will be whether its expanded battery-electric lineup can grow without weakening the hybrid momentum that produced the 64% milestone.
































