What's the difference?
Looking across BYD's line-up, you'd think you were reading the attractions for the local aquarium! And now the Sealion 7 has entered the splash zone, or more accurately, the most popular car segment - the mid-size SUV.
It fights for pole position against the long-running electric favourite, the Tesla Model Y but newcomer Cupra Tavascan also offers some sporty competition.
For this review we're testing the flagship Performance grade to see whether or not it offers family-friendly fun.
Australian EV buyers seem to be missing the point of the Mustang Mach-E.
Yes, Ford’s exorbitant early pricing did not help – which the mid-sized EV has yet to recover from. And the V8-muscle-car image – and baggage – that the Mustang prefix brings no doubt confuses and even repels some people. Especially eco-conscious ones.
But it’s not that complicated. The Mach-E is merely meant to be a sporty, stylish and attainable family car, albeit with electric power.
Five years on from its US launch, does the 2026 Series II facelift keep up with newer and fresher electric SUV alternatives? And is it worth the premium that the Mustang badge commands?
The BYD Sealion 7 Performance is well-priced and well-equipped. It more than holds its own against its mid-size electric SUV rivals. It has great motor outputs and it handles comfortably on the road. There's a lot to like here but some of the technology needs to be tweaked.
EV buyers who don’t or won’t see the point of the Mustang Mach-E are missing out.
This is a sporty and fun-to-drive electric SUV in the same way that the Ranger is the sporty and fun-to-drive ute. In other words, a lot of what makes Fords brilliant is alive and well here, without compromising functionality. The opposite of so many Chinese electric SUVs that shine brightest on the showroom floor, then.
Yes, a base Select that is around $10K cheaper to start with might help punters see the light even more clearly (and that's our choice), and it is starting to look dated inside and out, but overall, the Mach-E is an enjoyable, fulfilling and practical family proposition.
It may be named after a sea lion but it doesn’t resemble the blubbery cuteness of the creature itself. However, its sleek dynamic styling and performance outputs do call forth some of the creature's water prowess.
This prowess is hinted at by the 20-inch alloys which are fitted with Michelin tyres and red brake calipers. There’s some Porsche-like design notes in the wide swoopy nose and LED headlights. The rear is also quite handsome with its long LED band strip and narrow window giving it a sporty silhouette.
Head inside and the Performance showcases the best BYD cabin I've sampled. There are no strange accents or panelling like there are in the Atto 3. This proves that BYD can do premium well.
The quilted leather upholstery feels supple underhand and the sports seats with integrated headrests reminds you what it can achieve in a sprint.
The swoopy design is carried over inside with the door panels. The dashboard is simply styled but headlined by an enormous 15.6-inch display that can rotate between landscape or portrait mode. Some may liken it to an iPad but it works.
The panoramic sunroof keeps things bright and cheerful but there are some simplistic elements that are hard to ignore. Like the lack of buttons, minimalist mirror cover design on the sunvisors and a rather plain-looking centre console.
Everything else flows and my favourite feature inside is surprisingly the lever door handles! They're functional but cute.
So, what's changed with the facelift? Not much, meaning that the Mach-E – unveiled all the way back in late 2019 is beginning to look dated. Maybe that’s another classic Mustang trait.
The base Select gains the upper-series’ trick LED headlights. The Premium adopts some plastic body cladding. The grille treatments vary between the grades, with the GT boasting a unique look. Genuinely fresh new colours abound. And the alloys have been restyled.
Otherwise, it's still the same, Porsche Macan-esque small to medium-sized SUV crossover on the outside, down to the Hyundai Tucson-like vertical tail-light motif that barely seems like the regular Mustang muscle car’s, despite Ford’s intentions.
Inside, changes are largely limited to a repositioning of the gear selector from a rotary dial to a column shifter, Mercedes-style. That big portrait touchscreen could be straight out of a Ranger ute.
The cabin has space, space and then more space. Passenger comfort is all but guaranteed with the available leg- and headroom in each row.
The functions for the electric front seats means it's easy to find a comfortable position. Door apertures are wide for each row and despite a relatively low 140mm ground clearance, it's still an easy SUV to slide in and out of.
Technology looks great and the large 15.6-inch multimedia display is what catches your eye first. Graphics are sharply rendered and the touchscreen responsive. There's a lot of information and menus embedded into the display which means it's a system that will take you a beat to get used to.
It's not unique but the in-built voice assistant rarely works as it should and needs some work. Also, because of the lack of buttons and dials, all functions are accessed via the screen. I don't like this because it tends to draw your eyes from the road far more often than it should and some functions - like the heat and ventilation for the front seats - are buried in a few menus.
There is wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto but there are some gremlins that need to be ironed out. The connectivity is easy enough but the steering wheel mounted phone control didn't access Apple CarPlay. So, I couldn't hang up my phone call properly, it would instead access the Bluetooth phone menu and dial my last call. I had a few 'butt' dials this week because of it.
Storage is on par with the Performance rivals and up front the burden falls across the large glovebox and middle console but there is also a shelf underneath the centre console for bigger items, like a handbag. There are two phone cradles, although only one offers wireless charging, and two height-adjustable cupholders two drink bottle holders and small storage bins.
In the rear, you get two device pockets and a map pocket on the back of each front seat. There is a fold-down armrest with retractable cupholders and a small storage pocket (think Kindle-size) and there are storage bins in each door.
The boot capacity is a decent 500L and the floor can be adjusted to two heights, one offering a level loading space. There is also a frunk storage of 58L for any cables or random bits you don't use often. Under the boot floor there is also enough room for cables and the tyre repair kit. The powered tailgate can be access via your keyfob as well.
For a flagship grade, I would have expected a few extra amenities in the rear, like climate control and sunshades but it does have directional air vents, reading lights and a USB-A and C port.
As we’ve said before, the Mach-E is closer to something like, say, a BMW X4 than the boxier X3 from a proportions perspective, making it a classic coupe SUV.
Once you get over using the endlessly-annoying push-button door release, in lieu of a handle (why redesign the wheel?), that’s particularly noticeable entering/egressing the rear seat for larger people, though the front is fine.
While the interior is also clearly from an earlier era (and embarrassingly reminiscent of a Tesla), at least Ford finished engineering it for easy, seamless use.
The front seats are really comfy, ahead of a super-clear instrument pod, helping make for a great driving position, while the 15.5-inch display in the centre with Ford’s friendly SYNC4A operating system is simple to navigate once time is taken to familiarise. Current Ranger and Everest owners will feel right at home. The audio sound is superb too.
There’s a thoughtful amount of storage options, including for devices that require access to the handy USB outlets, ventilation is ample and the fit and finish in these Mexican-made Mustangs appears to be first class.
A big thumbs up, too, for the new column shifter and integrated central volume knob in the touchscreen that also allows adjustment of the climate control.
On the other hand, eyes must leave the road to dig into sub menus to change driving modes, side and rear vision is tight (those standard surround-view cameras sure come in handy), there are no paddle shifters to control regenerative braking, the glass roof neither opens nor completely blocks out sunlight due to there being no shade screen, and the overall ambience is more Ranger XLT than Ford LTD.
The back seat is surprisingly spacious given the coupe SUV dimensions, though the roofline may ruffle a few loose wigs. The backrests and cushions provides decent support, and most expected amenities are present, including air vents, USB outlets, overhead lighting/grab handles, coat hooks, cup/small bottle holders and centre armrest. And that glass ceiling does shower the cabin with light on a cloudy day.
Further back, the Mach-E offers 402 litres of cargo capacity that balloons out to 1420L with the split-fold back seats dropped, and there’s some hidden storage under the floor for smaller items. As mentioned earlier, the spare wheel is AWOL.
Existing owners will also notice a noticeably smaller ‘frunk’ area under the bonnet, where storage has plummeted from 134L to just 49L. That’s due to the newly-fitted heat pump that, at least helps boost efficiency in what is a spacious and practical family SUV.
The Sealion 7 is being offered in only two grades, the base Premium and the flagship Performance that we're testing for this review.
There are only four points of difference between the two grades. The Premium isn't all-wheel drive and doesn't include heated rear outboard seats, a heated steering wheel or dual electric motors like the Performance gets. That creates a $9K price hike to jump into the top-spec grade, bringing it to $63,990 before on-road costs.
It might be starting to sound expensive but it's still more affordable than most of its main rivals. This is because the Cupra Tavascan VZ is priced from $74,490 MRSP and the outgoing pre-update Tesla Model Y Performance comes in at $82,900 MSRP.
What do you get in the Sealion 7 Performance? A lot, it seems. Standard equipment includes electric front seats with heat and ventilation functions, adjustable under-thigh and lumbar supports, panoramic fixed sunroof and leather upholstery, a leather-wrapped steering wheel with mounted controls.
Technology looks top-notch with a crystal clear 360-degree view camera system, a rotating 15.6-inch multimedia system, 10.25-inch digital instrument cluster, coloured head-up display, dual-zone climate control, two USB-A and -C ports, 12-volt socket, V2L capability (via adapter), wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, 12-speaker Dynaudio sound system, over-the-air updates, and satellite navigation.
There's also keyless entry and start, powered tailgate, BYD digital key (via smartphone app), tyre repair kit, rain-sensing wipers, dusk-sensing LED headlights and soundproof double glazed glass on both the windshield and front windows.
Here's a worrying fact. The Mustang Mach-E is the cheapest new Ford passenger car you can buy in Australia that isn't based on a diesel-powered ute. And it still ain’t cheap!
When launched in Australia back in mid-2023, prices started north of $80,000 – all prices are before on-road costs – and then were swiftly slashed twice since then, as buyers basically stayed away.
Today, the well-equipped Select Single Motor RWD kicks off from $65,990. A grand more than before, but it does gain a heat pump to boost efficiency (though WLTP range remains steady at 470km), while also scoring more muscle, faster charging and – at last – softer suspension.
This is no stripped-back edition, with adaptive cruise control, dual-zone climate control, a 15.5-inch touchscreen, 360-degree-view camera, a glass roof, wireless Apple CarPlay/Android Auto, 10-speaker premium audio, a wireless charger, synthetic leather upholstery, powered and heated front seats, a powered tailgate and 19-inch alloys. Note that there is no spare wheel. Just a tyre-repair kit.
Meanwhile, the Premium Extended Range jumps $500 from $80,490 and continues with a bigger battery with an unchanged 600km of range, while it’s a near-$20K stretch from there for the flagship GT from $98,490.
Justifying a $1100-plus price hike is a more-powerful dual-motor set-up as well as a five-per cent range improvement at 515km, while retaining all-wheel drive (AWD), adaptive dampers, bolstered sports seats, 20-inch alloys and more.
Every grade includes advanced driver-assist systems (ADAS) tech from automatic braking and lane-support systems to 10 airbags – except in the GT, which only has nine. More on that in the safety section later on.
Against the stunning Polestar 4, swanky Kia EV6 and timeless Hyundai Ioniq 5, the Mach-E’s pricing is ballpark competitive, but is largely undercut by the sporty Cupra Tavascan, Skoda Enyaq, VW ID.4 and ID.5 cousins from Europe, as well as ubiquitous Tesla Model Y from China.
Speaking of which, the Ford seems downright unaffordable compared to the striking BYD Sealion 7, Deepal S07, Zeekr 7X, XPeng G6 and IM6 by MG. Game over then, you might think.
But, with names that sound like Cold War missile codes, none of these cheaper Chinese alternatives can match the rock-and-roll attitude that the evocative Mustang connection does.
And, damn it, the Mach-E’s calculated emotional play only heightens with exposure, which partly explains why it’s one of America’s best-selling EVs. Love it or hate it, even the comically contrived styling works.
The Performance is all-wheel drive and is fully electric with dual motors, a squirrel cage induction motor located at the front and a permanent magnet synchronous motor at the rear. Together they produce up to 390kW of power and 690Nm of torque.
This gives the flagship grade a 0-100km/h sprint time of just 4.5 seconds. There’s obviously ample power to be had here which will delight EV fans who like that tummy-falling sensation when accelerating.
Though employing Ford’s Global Electrified One (GE1) platform that is a variation of the tragically discontinued Focus small car and Escape mid-sized SUV’s modular C2 platform, the Mach-E is basically a rear-motor, rear-wheel-drive EV, with the main traction unit now an in-house design. Previously that was outsourced.
A permanent magnet synchronous electric motor, it delivers 212kW of power and 525Nm of torque to the rear wheels via a single-speed reduction gear transmission.
Tipping the scales at 2086kg in the (albeit bigger-battery) Premium and 2100kg in the Select, its power-to-weight ratio is nearly 102kW per tonne and 101kW/tonne respectively. The latter needs 6.2s to streak from 0-100km/h, which is just 0.1s shy of the former. Top speed for both is 180km/h.
Meanwhile, with an electric motor added on to the front axle, the 2276kg, 434kW/955Nm GT’s 190kW/tonne slices acceleration down to just 3.8s, on the way to 200km/h, and relies on AWD, adaptive dampers and performance tyres to help keep things under control. Suspension consists of MacPherson struts up front and a multi-link rear end arrangement.
The Sealion 7 Performance has a blade battery with a large 82.56kWh capacity which supports a 456km WLTP driving range. This isn’t terrible for city drivers but a regional driver will likely want a longer range. BYD includes a portable charging cable with the model.
Charging is sorted via a Type 2 CCS charging port which accepts up to 11kW on an AC charger and up to 150kW on a DC charger. On a 150kW DC charger, you can go from 10 to 80 per cent in as little as 32 minutes and that increases to more than eight hours on an 11kW AC charger. All of the figures are quite good and help with the general day-to-day convenience.
The official energy consumption figure is 20.4 kWh per 100km but after doing a healthy mix of open-road driving and city stuff, my average has popped out at 19.1kWh. I reckon it's a solid result for a ‘performance’ grade but I didn’t find the regenerative braking to be particularly strong on this model.
Ford says the Select averages 18.5kWh/100km on the European cycle, while the Premium and GT are at 17.7kWh/100km and 21.0kWh/100km, respectively. These figures are in line with most rivals given the Mach-E’s performance capabilities.
Two distinct battery packs are offered, depending on grade.
The Select features a (useable) 73kWh Lithium Ferro phosphate (LFP) battery, for 470km of WLTP driving range. Premium and GT models switch to an 88kWh and 91kWh Nickel Manganese Cobalt (NMC) unit, bumping range up to 600km and 515km respectively.
The GE1’s 400V architecture has a CCS Type 2 port with 11kW AC charging capacity, or 150kW for DC charging. Many rivals offer faster charging capabilities.
According to the European data, AC charging from empty to full using a regular household socket needs up to 47 hours, or 10 hours with a 7kW Wallbox, while, a 50kW DC charger requires up to 90 minutes for a 10-80 per cent top-up, or under 40 minutes with a 150kW DC charger.
The Performance grade offers plenty of power that is delivered wickedly quick without feeling overwhelming when you have to accelerate. You still feel in control, which is very important when you have outputs like this does.
The steering is responsive and light enough for quick lane changes. The general on-road handling is quite refined but there is more roll in corners than you’d expect and this is the only time the power can make the handling feel a tad wobbly.
Surprisingly, there isn't a one-pedal function and the regen braking isn’t particularly strong. It’s difficult to ‘creep’ forward in this in stop/start traffic where it can feel a bit jerky at times, so it handles best on the open road.
Visibility is mostly good but the rear window is narrow and a digital rear-view mirror would have been welcomed in this model. Suspension is sports-firm but forgiving over bigger bumps.
The 360-degree view camera and surrounding sensors makes this super easy to park and honestly, you shouldn’t have any trouble manoeuvring the Sealion 7.
If your idea of a Mustang is a big, heavy and rousing grand touring machine, then the Mach-E certainly lives up to the image.
And, in some ways, exceeds it, because – among the electric SUV fraternity – this one’s the driver’s choice, with a level of control and finesse that the muscle machines of yesteryear could only dream about.
Let's start with the performance. The 212kW Select and Premium are certainly fast enough. Sprightly off the mark, their acceleration is very smooth yet very determined, packing plenty of instantaneous punch when some extra squirt is required. Really, this is all the speed you’ll ever need.
Ford’s dynamic DNA force is very strong in these EVs, with steering that feels light yet precise, and naturally connected to the road, providing comparatively agile, flowing handling and decent body control. This is backed up by nicely nuanced traction intervention that – in true rear-drive Pony car tradition – allows for some playful rear-end breakaway.
After years of testing dreary, remote EVs – especially from but not just limited to China, the Mach-E’s willingness to interact with the driver is like enjoying a long, cold drink after hours in the hot sun.
With twin electric motors making 434kW and nearly 1000Nm, the GT turns the amp – if not quite the volume – up to 11, with tremendous response and terrific thrust right from the get-go. It’s actually quite astounding how contained and controlled the AWD flagship’s performance is delivered, given how brazenly fast it is down a straight road.
Jumping out of one of the other Mach-E models, the GT’s extra heft is immediately obvious around the bends, since it doesn’t quite have their lightness of touch. Grip is phenomenal, yet the driver can break traction even momentarily if desired, and there’s a sense that, in the right hands, few rivals with similar performance could keep up with the Ford in full flight. It’s fast everywhere all the time. But it’s just not quite as athletic or fun as the Select and Premium.
Note that, since we were on busy public roads, most of this assessment was carried out using the normal and not sport driving mode.
The driver assist safety systems are also really well tuned, sparing the driver the distraction and frustration of needless intervention, even when piloted enthusiastically.
The previous Mach-E was widely criticised for delivering a hard ride, even with the GT’s adaptive dampers. While you’d never call the suspension supple, the 2026 model’s ability to better absorb bumps is a welcome development, allowing the driver to better enjoy all the other benefits on offer. There are softer and more isolated alternatives, but few rivals are as rewarding dynamically.
Downsides include too much road noise intrusion over certain surfaces, the lack of paddles for the regenerative braking, and the fact that to switch that on or off requires the driver to resort to diving into a touchscreen menu. The same goes for switching between the cringy Whisper (eco), Active (normal) and Untame (sport) modes. How difficult would it be to fit a simple button to activate these?
Finally, thick pillars and small side/rear windows can make vision out difficult in tight spaces.
The Mach-E may be getting on to its sixth year in production, but there’s a welcome, non-EV analogue connection to the way this otherwise electrifying SUV goes, steers, handles and grips the road. Like many of the best Fords, the engineers have gone to the very real effort of prioritising driver enjoyment, without sacrificing everyday functionality.
Like we said earlier, the more time you spend in the Mach-E, the more enjoyable it gets.
The new Sealion 7 has a maximum five-star ANCAP safety rating from testing done in 2025 and scored well across its individual assessment criteria, scoring 87 per cent for adult protection and 93 per cent for child protection, respectively.
The Sealion 7 features nine airbags, including side chest airbags for both rows but it’s common to see these just on the front, so this is excellent.
When it comes to standard safety equipment, it's almost a case of what doesn't it have? Some stand-out features include front and rear cross-traffic alert, blind-spot view monitor (which pops a video feed of your left blind spot onto the multimedia display) and child detection alert.
Other standard features include lane keeping aid, lane departure warning, adaptive cruise control, forward collision warning, rear collision warning, driver attention monitoring, 360-degree view camera system, and multiple parking sensors.
The autonomous emergency braking has car, pedestrian, motorcyclist and cyclist detection. For pedestrian, motorcyclist and cyclist detection, it is operational from 8.0 to 80km/h. For car detection, it is operational between 4.0 to 150km/h.
There are ISOFIX child seat mounts and three top-tether anchor points and the rear row is wide enough to accommodate three child seats side by side.
Tested by ANCAP back in 2021, the Mach-E Select and Premium models managed a five-star ANCAP crash-test rating. The GT version remains unrated.
There’s a fairly comprehensive list of ADAS tech, including autonomous emergency braking (AEB) with intersection assist, reverse brake-assist, post-impact braking, lane-keep aid, lane-departure warning, evasive-steer assist, blind-spot monitoring, cross-traffic alert, adaptive cruise control with full stop/go functionality, traffic-sign recognition and tyre pressure monitors.
Select and Premium have 10 airbags (dual front, front-centre, a driver’s knee, front-side, rear-side and full-length curtain/head), but the GT misses out on the others’ front-centre airbag due its space-impeding bolstered sports seats, dropping the airbag count to nine.
The AEB tech operates between 5km/h to 80km/h in pedestrian, cyclist and back-over scenarios day or night, and between 5-187km/h car-to-car. The lane support systems work between 65km/h to 187km/h.
A pair of ISOFIX latches are fitted to the outboard rear seats, along with a three top-tether anchorage points.
Speaking of kids, while unnecessarily fiddly, the hidden door ‘buttons’ do have an anti-snag function that stops an opening door from slamming shut on venerable fingers.
The Sealion 7 is covered by a six-year/150,000km warranty which is good for the class. The battery is covered by an eight-year/160,000km warranty which is a normal term.
The Sealion 7 gets a 10-year capped price servicing but it’s expensive compared to some of its peers at $4157.
Servicing intervals are spaced at every 12 months or 20,000km, whichever occurs first.
A five-year/unlimited kilometre warranty applies to the Mach-E, along with seven years of roadside assistance, activated annually if serviced at a Ford dealer.
Service intervals are every 12 months or 15,000km, whichever occurs first.
Prices for the 2026 facelift weren’t available at the time of publishing, but last year’s model alternated between costing $140 and $185 per service for the first 10 years. And the Mach-E can be maintained at any one of the 180-or-so Ford dealers network Australia-wide.
Ford says the EV Traction Battery is covered by an eight-year/160,000km warranty.