BYD Sealion 8 vs Chery Tiggo 4 PRO

What's the difference?

VS
BYD Sealion 8
BYD Sealion 8

$56,990 - $70,990

2026 price

Chery Tiggo 4 PRO
Chery Tiggo 4 PRO

$19,500 - $35,490

2025 price

Summary

2026 BYD Sealion 8
2025 Chery Tiggo 4 PRO
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Inline 4, 1.5L

Turbo 4, 1.5L
Fuel Type
Premium Unleaded/Electric

Premium Unleaded Petrol
Fuel Efficiency
1.1L/100km (combined)

7.3L/100km (combined)
Seating
7

5
Dislikes
  • Irrelevant performance in AWD versions
  • No spare tyre
  • Tight third row seating

  • Brakes feel soft
  • Poor grip in the wet
  • Active safety needs improvement
2026 BYD Sealion 8 Summary

It was, perhaps, a matter of time before BYD joined the seven-seat SUV brigade. In fact, the real surprise is that it has taken the Chinese brand as long as it has to begin mining the rich vein of Aussie car buyers looking for a full-sized SUV with the ability to seat a bigger family across three rows. But here it is, finally, anyway, the Sealion 8.

Interestingly, BYD hasn’t started its quest for seven-seat dominance by offering a traditional hybrid driveline. Instead, it’s gone straight for the throat with a pair of plug-in hybrid drivelines, both offering their own distinct take on the concept.

The first is a front-drive variant of the Sealion 8. With a single electric motor and a useful range, it stands as the sensible choice. But for those who want more performance, there’s the almost comically-fast all-wheel drive version with a pair of electric motors and monstrous acceleration. Interestingly, there doesn’t seem to be much in the middle, but the brand’s typically sharp pricing means there’s not a huge price-gap to negotiate in any case.

Of course, this is a pretty crowded marketplace right now, and standing out is the key to success. Whether that’s through value-for-money, performance, practicality or just shock value is open to debate, but it remains that BYD is launching the Sealion 8 into seriously competitive seas.

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2025 Chery Tiggo 4 PRO Summary

Chery would likely prefer you forget its initial foray into the Australian market, but doing so would do a disservice to the brand.

We don’t need to go into the nitty gritty of what went wrong back then, but needless to say the first Chery models of around 15 years ago were not particularly good.

Since its return in 2022 Chery is unrecognisable from that first attempt at cracking this market. The Omoda 5, the first model of its relaunch, was flawed but light years ahead of the earlier models in terms of design, presentation and build quality.

It has since expanded with the larger Tiggo 7 Pro and Tiggo 8 Pro Max SUVs and then in late 2024 it added this, the Tiggo 4 Pro. This is Chery’s answer to the likes of the Hyundai Venue, Mazda CX-30, Toyota Yaris Cross, etc in what’s known as the ‘light SUV’ segment.

Chery had a very good 2024, more than doubling its sales, so there are clear signs the brand is enjoying far greater success with its second attempt in Australia.

But is the Tiggo 4 Pro worth buying, if you’re in the market for a compact SUV? Let’s answer that question as we go through all the details.

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Deep dive comparison

2026 BYD Sealion 8 2025 Chery Tiggo 4 PRO

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