
A brand’s decline rarely happens all at once. More often, it is a slow process that goes unnoticed until the damage is already too deep to reverse. That is exactly what happened to Skoda in China. What was once the Czech automaker’s most important global stronghold has now become the market it is quietly leaving behind. Reuters reported this week that Skoda will withdraw from the Chinese market by mid 2026, ending a chapter that once looked central to the brand’s long term future.
For years, China was the key to Skoda’s global growth. The brand reached its high point there in 2018, when deliveries climbed to 341,000 vehicles, making China its largest single market worldwide. That success now feels very distant. By 2025, Skoda’s deliveries in China had fallen to just 15,000 units, a collapse of roughly 96% in seven years. The speed of that drop is what makes the story so striking. This was not a gradual fade over decades. It was a sharp and punishing reversal within a single automotive cycle.
The Numbers Tell The Story Clearly
The sales path shows just how steep the fall became. After delivering 282,000 vehicles in China in 2019, Skoda dropped to 173,000 in 2020. The slide continued to 71,200 in 2021, 44,600 in 2022, 22,800 in 2023, 17,500 in 2024, and finally 15,000 in 2025. This was not just a downward trend. It was a near total collapse in relevance. Reuters summed up the broader picture simply, noting that Skoda had once sold more than 300,000 vehicles annually in China between 2016 and 2018 before dwindling to only 15,000 last year.
At the center of this collapse is the brutal transformation of the Chinese auto market. Domestic manufacturers have moved with far greater speed in electric vehicles, software, connected technology, and pricing strategy, while many established Western brands have struggled to keep up. Reuters has repeatedly noted the intense competitive pressure facing legacy automakers in China, especially as local companies such as BYD and Geely reshaped the market and pushed foreign brands into a much harsher environment. In a market moving this quickly, long standing brand recognition is no longer enough.
Skoda Is Leaving China, But Not Retreating Globally
Skoda’s exit from China does not mean the brand is weakening everywhere. In fact, the global picture looks much healthier. Skoda delivered 1,043,900 vehicles worldwide in 2025, up 12.7% from the prior year and its strongest performance in six years. The company also became the third best selling car brand in Europe for the first time in its core EU 27+4 market, while growth accelerated in places such as India, Türkiye, Morocco, and Egypt. That contrast makes the China story even more telling. Skoda is not collapsing as a company. It is losing one market that changed faster than it could adapt.
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