- GM has officially shuttered production of the BrightDrop electric commercial van.
- Production has been paused since May.
- The automaker cited the end of the EV tax credit and slower than expected development of the commercial EV market.
General Motors’ BrightDrop electric delivery vans are no more. The automaker made the decision to shutter production of the commercial vehicle at its CAMI Assembly plant in Canada and announced the news on Tuesday alongside its third-quarter earnings.
According to GM, the reason for the shutdown is “much slower than expected” development of the commercial electric delivery van market. It also placed blame at the “changing regulatory environment” as well as the federal EV tax credit coming to an end. On Sept. 30, the $7,500 consumer EV tax credit ended along with an up to $40,000 incentive for buyers of commercial vehicles.
This probably shouldn’t come as too much of a surprise. There have been signs of weakness in the BrightDrop division for months.
It paused production of both the BrightDrop 400 and BrightDrop 600 models back in May. At the time, it laid off 500 workers and blamed slow sales. It initially planned to reopen the factory in July, but pushed that date back until October. However, sales still didn’t pick up through September, which led to an extended pause through mid-November.
Last year, GM folded the BrightDrop division into its Chevrolet brand in an apparent attempt to make the vans more marketable.
BrightDrop vans have been piling up in lots on either side of the Canadian border for months. At the end of Q3, GM recorded just 3,976 sales for the entire year—60% of which were from Q3 as buyers looked to take advantage of the expiring EV tax credit.
To be fair to GM, that is an uptick. In 2024, GM delivered just 1,529 BrightDrop vans. And in 2023 (when BrightDrop as a company was re-absorbed into GM), it recorded just 497 deliveries.
Needless to say, you can see why GM made a decision to fold here.
It’s not like electric delivery vans aren’t a slam-dunk for urban transit. Rivian’s commercial vans, for example, have been propping up Amazon’s delivery network for months and sold a whopping 6,809 units through Q3. The venerable Ford e-Transit (which delivered 4,174 units for 2025 at the end of Q2) is also a fairly popular option—likely because it started at $22,400 less than GM’s offering before GM drastically dropped the price earlier this year.
In hindsight, you can view BrightDrop as a casualty of the auto industry’s overconfident EV era. Up until the last couple of years, Detroit thought it could electrify anything and consumers would lap it up.
It also made sense on paper. Emission targets become a cakewalk, battery prowess is easy to show off and the company is hip with new EV tech. But when EV prices and consumer demand failed to meet that crucial crossover point, adoption cooled off and costs remained high.
So let’s pour one out for BrightDrop. It was one of the many electrified ideas that burned too bright and burnt out fast. Maybe in GM’s post post-Ultium era it will cook up a sensibly priced replacement. More BrightDrop News We want your opinion! What would you like to see on Insideevs.com? – The InsideEVs team