LDV Deliver 9 vs Kgm Musso Ev

What's the difference?

VS
LDV Deliver 9
LDV Deliver 9

$19,990 - $39,999

2021 price

Kgm Musso Ev
Kgm Musso Ev

$57,130 - $61,014

2026 price

Summary

2021 LDV Deliver 9
2026 Kgm Musso Ev
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Diesel Turbo 4, 2.0L

Fuel Type
Diesel

-
Fuel Efficiency
0.0L/100km (combined)

-
Seating
3

0
Dislikes
  • No cargo barrier
  • No driver’s footrest
  • Three-year warranty

  • Lacks punch
  • Limited towing capacity
  • Only wired smartphone mirroring
2021 LDV Deliver 9 Summary

There are currently 14 rivals competing for customers in the Light Duty or LD (3501-8000kg GVM) segment of Australia’s heavy commercial vehicle market. Business buyers and fleet operators are thick on the ground here and competition for their business is fierce.

Chinese brand LDV, a division of the huge SAIC Motor conglomerate which is now the seventh largest automotive company in the world, recently joined this battle with its new Deliver 9 van range that’s priced to entice. We spent a week aboard one to see how LDV’s claim of superior value stacks up when there’s work to be done.

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2026 Kgm Musso Ev Summary

Electrified utes are growing in popularity in Australia and carmakers have been paying attention.

While the BYD Shark 6 plug-in hybrid (PHEV) ute is by far the best-selling as it stands, there hasn’t really been any electric ute to go up against the poorly received LDV eT60, until now.

South Korea’s KGM (formerly known as SsangYong) has just launched the Musso EV, which is a purely electric dual-cab ute. It’s unrelated to the existing, turbo-diesel Musso and is more closely related to the current car-based Actyon and Torres SUVs.

Read along to see how this ute stacks up against its growing set of competitors.

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Deep dive comparison

2021 LDV Deliver 9 2026 Kgm Musso Ev

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