Tesla’s delivery numbers are bouncing back, and the catalyst is one of the oldest forces in the auto industry: pain at the pump. European demand for Tesla vehicles is surging as rising fuel prices, driven largely by ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, push consumers toward battery-electric alternatives.

Analysts project Tesla’s Q2 2026 deliveries will land around 402,780 units. That figure represents roughly a 5% increase year-over-year and a 12.5% sequential jump from Q1 2026.

Europe is doing the heavy lifting

European deliveries are projected to grow approximately 40% year-over-year in Q2 2026. That’s a remarkable reversal for a region where Tesla spent most of 2025 getting hammered. May 2025 registrations, for instance, dropped 27.9%, part of a broader slide that had analysts questioning whether the company’s brand damage was becoming permanent.

The ongoing conflict involving Iran has kept crude oil prices elevated. European EV sales more broadly have surged by over 51% during notable recent periods, largely attributable to those same high fuel prices. Tesla’s Model 3 and Model Y continue to constitute the majority of Tesla’s vehicle deliveries both in Europe and globally.