The new Dodge Charger Daytona EV rolled into dealerships late last year, but it’s finally finding footing in 2025 with strong early sales results. Through the first three months of the year, Dodge has sold 1,947 examples of the electric muscle car, which means it’s already outpacing some of its competitors.
By comparison, Toyota sold 421 units of the Supra this year, BMW has only moved 520 examples of the Z4, Subaru has sold just 802 examples of the BRZ, and Mazda has sold just 1,146 Miatas. Interestingly, Dodge still managed to move 1,052 units of the outgoing Charger through the first three months of this year—though the EV accounted for 65 percent of total Charger sales.

Photo by: Dodge
On the flip side, Ford has sold 9,377 examples of the Mustang so far in 2025—even though sales are down 28.1 percent. Chevrolet has sold 6,794 examples of the Corvette so far in 2025, which represents a 20.8 percent decrease compared to the previous year. Even Toyota sold 2,777 examples of the slow-selling GR86 in the first three months of 2025, and it’s the only big mover on this list, with an increase of 39.7 percent over the previous year.
Here’s how sales for each of these sporty cars look in the first three months of the year (Note: some companies do not break out individual sales by month):
Model | 2025 Sales | March 2025 Sales |
Ford Mustang | 9,377 Units | 4,186 Units |
Chevrolet Corvette | 6,794 Units | N/A |
Toyota GR86 | 2,777 Units | 1,146 Units |
Dodge Charger Daytona EV | 1,947 Units | N/A |
Mazda Miata | 1,146 Units | 911 Units |
Subaru BRZ | 802 Units | 334 Units |
BMW Z4 | 520 Units | N/A |
Toyota Supra | 421 Units | 179 Units |
In an attempt to get more buyers through the door, Dodge recently offered lease deals as low as $299 per month for the new Charger, as well as purchase discounts of up to $12,500. While the company currently only offers the electric Charger Daytona, the automaker plans to roll out the gas-powered SixPack model early this summer due to stronger demand. That should bump Charger sales even higher.