Honda is exiting the US electric vehicle market — at least for now. The Japanese automaker has officially confirmed it will end sales of the Honda Prologue, its only EV in the United States, following the completion of the 2026 model year.
The news, first reported by CarBuzz, comes just months after Honda cancelled three other EV models in March, signaling a dramatic shift in the company’s North American electrification strategy.
A Short-Lived Electric SUV
The Honda Prologue was first announced in 2021 and went on sale in 2024, giving the brand its first — and now only — mass-market electric vehicle in the US. Born from a unique collaboration with General Motors, the Prologue was built on GM’s Ultium battery platform, a technology GM itself abandoned in 2024 in favor of alternative battery designs.
Despite its relatively short lifespan, the Prologue wasn’t a sales flop. According to Electrek, it ranked as the sixth-best-selling EV in the US during its first full year, trailing only dominant players like the Tesla Model Y and Model 3.
“Honda will conclude sales of Prologue later this year following completion of the 2026 model year,” the company said in a statement. “Prologue customers will continue to receive full support through our dealer network, including service, parts, and warranty coverage.”
The Federal Incentive Effect
The Prologue’s demise is widely attributed to the end of federal EV tax incentives in the US, a policy shift that has reshaped the economics of electric vehicle sales across the industry. Without the up-to-$7,500 federal tax credit, many EVs suddenly became harder to sell at their existing price points.
The loss of incentives has created a growing graveyard of discontinued or cancelled EVs. However, there is a modest silver lining: rising gas prices have helped stabilize overall EV demand, and California recently introduced instant rebates for new and used EV purchases.
Honda’s EV Future Remains Uncertain
Honda demoed several next-generation EVs in November 2025, but the company remained noncommittal about bringing them to the US market. The cancellation of the Honda O sedan and SUV in March further suggested the company is likely to withhold future EVs from the United States, at least for the foreseeable future.
While Honda continues to sell compact EVs in markets like Japan and China, US customers will have extremely limited zero-emission options once the Prologue is gone. The only remaining alternative will be the Honda CR-V e:FCEV, a hydrogen fuel-cell vehicle available exclusively in California.
What This Means for EV Adoption
Honda’s retreat from the US EV market is a significant blow to the broader push for electrification. As one of the world’s largest automakers, Honda’s absence from the American EV landscape reduces consumer choice at a time when the industry is already grappling with uncertain demand and shifting regulatory policies.
The Prologue’s discontinuation also underscores the fragility of automaker partnerships in the EV space. The Honda-GM collaboration, once seen as a promising template for sharing battery technology and development costs, has effectively unraveled — GM abandoned its Ultium platform, and Honda is now walking away from the product it helped create.
For US consumers, the message is clear: the road to EV adoption remains bumpy, even for the biggest names in the automotive industry.