Cadillac has officially crossed a landmark moment in its transition toward electrification, surpassing 100,000 electric vehicle sales in the United States in less than four years since launching the all-electric Cadillac Lyriq.
The achievement marks a significant turnaround for the luxury brand, which only entered the mainstream EV market in 2022 with the Lyriq. Since then, Cadillac has rapidly expanded its electric lineup while positioning itself as a serious alternative to rivals like Tesla, BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Audiand Lexus.
The announcement came directly from GM North America President Duncan Aldredwho described the milestone as the result of years of work across engineering, manufacturing, dealer networks, and customer experience teams.
“Today, I’m proud to share that we’ve surpassed 100,000 total Cadillac EV sales,” Aldred said in GM’s official statement.
Lyriq Continues To Lead Cadillac’s EV Charge
The Lyriq remains the backbone of Cadillac’s electric strategy and continues to drive the majority of the brand’s EV sales. The luxury crossover gained strong momentum throughout 2025 thanks to improved production, wider dealer availability, and growing consumer confidence in premium EVs.
But Cadillac’s expansion is no longer dependent on a single model.
The arrival of newer electric models like the Cadillac Optiq, Cadillac Vistiqand Cadillac Escalade IQ has significantly broadened the company’s EV portfolio. At the ultra-premium end sits the hand-built Cadillac Celestiqa low-volume halo car designed to showcase Cadillac’s future ambitions.
Together, these models are helping Cadillac reshape its identity from a traditional American luxury brand into a modern EV-focused automaker.
Winning Buyers From Tesla And German Rivals
One of the biggest stories behind Cadillac’s recent growth is its ability to attract buyers away from competing luxury brands.
According to GM, nearly 75 percent of customers purchasing the Lyriq, Optiq, Vistiq, and Escalade IQ are completely new to Cadillac. Many are reportedly trading in vehicles from Tesla and established German luxury brands.
That conquest rate is becoming increasingly important in the premium EV segment, where customer loyalty has historically been difficult to break. Cadillac’s combination of bold styling, large interiors, advanced technology, and competitive pricing appears to be resonating with shoppers looking for alternatives to the usual luxury EV choices.
Industry data has already hinted at this momentum. Cadillac EV registrations reportedly surged by 93 percent in October 2025, while GM’s wider electric vehicle business continued recording strong growth entering 2026.
Cadillac’s Next Challenge: Keeping The Momentum Alive
While crossing 100,000 EV sales is a major achievement, Cadillac knows the real test is sustaining long-term growth in an increasingly crowded EV market.
Aldred believes customer retention could become one of Cadillac’s biggest strengths moving forward.
“Once customers move to an EV, they tend to stay,” he said.
That confidence reflects a broader shift happening across the automotive industry, where luxury buyers are becoming more comfortable making the jump to electric vehicles permanently.
For Cadillac, the first 100,000 sales may have proven the strategy works. The next phase will determine whether the brand can truly become one of America’s defining luxury EV leaders.
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