Abstract The structure of electrolytic capacitorless in automotive electronic applications has the advantages of lower cost and better reliability. However, motor drive systems using this structure may experience unstable bus voltage. To this end, this paper proposes an active damping control strategy based on virtual impedance. By modelling the electric drive system and conducting stability analysis, the cause of bus voltage resonance due to the use of small capacitors is revealed. Based on the extracted DC bus voltage harmonic signal, additional voltage vectors are added in the d-axis and q-axis voltage vectors, eliminating the impedance mismatch problem in the drive system caused by the reduction of bus capacitance, effectively suppressing the voltage oscillation on the machine side of the drive system. Simulation data shows that under the condition of using small-capacity ceramic capacitors, the method proposed in this paper achieves a harmonic suppression capability similar to that of large-capacity electrolytic capacitors, effectively ensuring the application safety of automotive drivers with electrolytic capacitorless architecture.