LDV Terron 9 vs BMW IX1

What's the difference?

VS
LDV Terron 9
LDV Terron 9

2026 price

BMW IX1
BMW IX1

$59,880 - $89,990

2023 price

Summary

2026 LDV Terron 9
2023 BMW IX1
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Diesel Turbo 4, 2.5L

Not Applicable, 0.0L
Fuel Type
Diesel

Electric
Fuel Efficiency
7.9L/100km (combined)

0.0L/100km (combined)
Seating
5

5
Dislikes
  • Intrusive, clumsy driver aids
  • No cab-chassis option
  • Tyres won't cope off-road

  • Could use stronger single-pedal braking tech
  • Some road/tyre noise intrusion
  • Hides its ‘EV-ness’ with regular ICE X1 styling
2026 LDV Terron 9 Summary

Need a dual-cab ute? You’re in luck. Not only does Australia have access to a huge variety of makes and models in the dual-cab space, there is also a huge range of prices and equipment levels.

The sweet spot for Aussie buyers, though, seems to be the dual-cab layout with four-wheel drive and enough convenience and safety gear to make the vehicle a viable family car as well as a work truck when necessary. Which is precisely where the Chinese brands including GWM, BYD and LDV have targeted their current ranges.

There’s been a lot of chat about such vehicles lately, but rather than let the formula stagnate, LDV has ushered in the Terron 9, a dual-cab that, size-wise, falls roughly between the familiar makes and models and the full-sized American-made stuff. This is a crucial point, too, as the Terron 9’s extra size might be a hint on where the dual-cab market is going generally. Certainly, every other class of car and ute is creeping up in size, why not dual-cabs too?

Like the other Chinese brands, of course, the Terron 9’s appeal will largely be based on value for money, so it’s worth picking the car apart to find out how it stands in that regard. But this is 2025, so the Terron 9 is also going to have to produce the goods in terms of driving ability and safety, that modern dual-cab buyers are looking for.

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2023 BMW IX1 Summary

The world is full of shock brand announcements.

Remember the time Coke suddenly changed its cola recipe? Or when Apple decided to take on Nokia with iPhone? Nobody saw those coming.

We all know how the latter turned out and even the former eventually became a marketing masterstroke.

Now here's another super-surprise – a German electric luxury SUV that’s actually comparatively inexpensive. And not stingily equipped. Yep, we’re talking about the iX1.

Based on the really rather impressive third-generation X1, it decisively undercuts similarly-specified rivals from Mercedes-Benz (EQA, EQB) and Genesis (GV60).

But is the Bavarian EV SUV worth paying that little bit extra for against (only very slightly) cheaper alternatives like the Hyundai Ioniq 5, Kia EV6, Tesla Model Y, Polestar 2 and Volvo XC40 Recharge?

Let’s see.

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Deep dive comparison

2026 LDV Terron 9 2023 BMW IX1

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