Isuzu D-Max vs Jaecoo J5

What's the difference?

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Isuzu D-Max
Isuzu D-Max

$36,200 - $80,900

2026 price

Jaecoo J5
Jaecoo J5

$35,990 - $35,990

2026 price

Summary

2026 Isuzu D-Max
2026 Jaecoo J5
Safety Rating

Engine Type

Fuel Type
-

-
Fuel Efficiency
-

-
Seating
0

0
Dislikes
  • Not many variants with 2.2L
  • Lane-keep is a bit keen
  • Interior feels spartan

  • Copycat styling is a bit icky
  • Not as competent on-road as it should be
  • Rear seat is light on features
2026 Isuzu D-Max Summary

There’s a fairly big change hiding under the metal of one of Australia’s favourite utes. The Isuzu D-Max has a new 2.2-litre engine, replacing the 1.9-litre unit, and it brings a couple of other things with it.

A bigger engine designed to be more powerful and more efficient can only be a good thing, surely, especially with Isuzu looking down the barrel of stringent emissions laws with only two models in the line-up, both diesel powered.

But is this new 2.2-litre engine any good? Isuzu’s gone to the trouble of a new gearbox and some new tech to go with it, so we check it out to see if it stacks up against the increasingly strong competition.

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2026 Jaecoo J5 Summary

Yet another Chinese-branded EV has arrived on our shores and if the name Jaecoo doesn’t ring a bell, that’s understandable. It’s a relatively new offshoot of Chery, making its presence felt with a growing line-up aimed squarely at everyday buyers. Think mainstream, built around accessible pricing and a decent spread of features.

Offered in a single grade, the Jaecoo J5 EV is a small SUV entering an already crowded segment. It goes up against familiar names like the BYD Atto 2, Chery E5 and MG S5 EV, all offering broadly similar promises on paper. The real question, then, is whether the J5 EV manages to carve out an identity of its own, and whether its appeal stretches beyond the price tag.

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Deep dive comparison

2026 Isuzu D-Max 2026 Jaecoo J5

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