Leapmotor B03X Reviews
You'll find all our Leapmotor B03X reviews right here.
Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the 's features, design, practicality, fuel consumption, engine and transmission, safety, ownership and what it's like to drive.
The most recent reviews sit up the top of the page, but if you're looking for an older model year or shopping for a used car, scroll down to find Leapmotor B03X dating back as far as 2027.
Leapmotor Reviews and News
Leapmotor B03X 2027 review: International first drive
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By Andrew Chesterton · 12 May 2026
Few brands do the whole cheap and cheerful thing better than the Chinese newcomers. Marques like Leapmotor, Geely, BYD and Chery have put such downward pressure on pricing that they’ve effectively redefined what things cost, and the old guard has been left scrambling (and often failing) to keep up. The challenge, though, is getting the balance exactly right. If you picture the scales of justice, with those little plates hanging off chains, you really want each side to be exactly even. The cheerfulness has to match the level of cheap and less of the former means more of the latter to balance the ledger. And on (admittedly brief) first impressions, the Leapmotor B03X is going to want to be cheap. It’s not that it lacks cheer entirely. It’s more that this feels like unapologetic cut-price motoring from behind the wheel, and Leapmotor would need to price it as such to make a splash in our market.In China, for example, it’s very, very affordable. The cheapest version converts to around $14,000 in Aussie dollars. That’s not going to happen in our market, but if it started in the mid-$20k bracket, those scales would be spirit-level balanced.But before we go any further than that, I should probably explain just what the hell I’m talking about, right?The B03X is Leapmotor’s small and all-electric SUV, called the A10 in China. At 4270mm long, 1810mm wide and 1635mm tall, we’re talking BYD Atto 2-sized here, which is the B03X’s clearest direct rival. In its domestic market it’s offered with two LFP battery sizes, 39.8kWh or 53kWh, with a claimed CLTC range of 403km or 505km. You need to shave some distance from both to get closer to an accurate WLTP number. I’m hypothesising here, but I’d say around 410kms from the bigger battery would be about right.DC fast charging is limited to around 130kW, but the brand says that's enough to go from 30 to 80 per cent charges in around 15mins. There's no word yet on AC charging, or how long it takes to go from empty to full.Providing the power is a front-mounted (so front-wheel drive) electric motor, and the power outputs are, well, less than impressive. You can choose between 70kW and 150Nm, presumably with the smaller and lighter battery. The most powerful version dials those figures all the way up (well, not that far up, actually) to 90kW and 150Nm.You don’t need to don a deerstalker hat to figure out what those outputs mean for acceleration. We put the B03X to a brief test on a rented track near Leapmotor’s Chinese HQ, and found flat-footed acceleration to be leisurely at best.The brand says the run to 100km/h can take up to 12 seconds, but it feels longer. Prepare to be overtaken by Lime bikes. And possibly pedestrians. That alone largely limits the B03X to the urban jungle. You'd need a sun dial to accurately measure overtaking manoeuvres on our long and dusty highways.I’m hesitant to waggle a finger too aggressively at vehicles we drive in China, as their tastes differ so much from our own. Most brands – Leapmotor included – change the ride and handling balance for export markets. And should the B03X make it to Australia, they will likely do the same, as the domestic-market version felt a little too soft and spongey through its suspension.If that’s the cheap, what’s the cheerful? You get a hell of a lot of stuff for your investment, whatever that ends up being. An electric powertrain, decent city range, 18-inch alloy wheels, LED lighting, a giant 14.6-inch central screen, a second digital driver display, clever under-seat storage, seat heating, a glass roof, a cabin without a scrap of fabric and an automatic boot.You also get Leapmotor's version of a slightly watered-down take on Tesla's Full Self Driving Supervised. The B03X will hold its speed on the freeway, change lanes and even take the right exit without your input.There's also space, and lots of it. Myself and another adult sat in the backseat of the B03X for about 30 minuntes or so, and we found we had plenty of room to get comfy. There’s also more than 600 litres of cargo space – and more than 1500L with the backseat folded flat.The B03X isn’t confirmed for an Australian launch, but it’s on the brand’s consideration list for a local debut. It just needs to get those scales to balance first.
Leapmotor D19 2027 review: International first drive
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By Andrew Chesterton · 07 May 2026
If bigger really is better, then Leapmotor might be onto something with the D19. Because the Chinese brand’s newest flagship SUV is a monster.Just launched in China, the D19 is a three-row, six- or seven-seat large SUV offered in either full BEV (with two or three electric motors) guise, or as a plug-in hybrid REEV, or range extender electric vehicle, which is the one we’ve tested.At more than 5.2m long and almost two metres wide, we’re talking bigger than a LandCruiser 300 Series here, but while the hulking Toyota is designed to reduce mountains to mere molehills, the D19 fulfills another brief entirely.This one is about space, and lots of it. Which is fitting really, given our brief test in China revealed a drive experience that felt a bit like being in zero gravity, only with fewer George Clooneys and Sandra Bullocks. But more on that in a moment. Before we get into the details, can I just put my cards on the table. I reckon that, in the three-row-SUV world, six seats are infinitely better than seven. I love the two-seat second-row layout in everything from this to the Hyundai Ioniq 9 and Tesla Model Y L. Unless you absolutely need every seat you can get your hands on, then six seats is the way to go. Now, to the D19. In typical Chinese fashion there’s a lot of stuff. The standard features list includes 20-inch alloys, air suspension, a massive 15.6-inch central screen up front and two 9.0-inch touchscreens in the back. The first and second row seats are heated, ventilated and offer a massage function, too. For the record, this thing costs the equivalent of around $A45k in China, and it’s stacked. There’s even an 8.1-litre fridge, and a 21.4-inch rear screen that folds down from the roof, meaning you can kick back with a cold drink and a movie while someone else drives.The REEV philosophy, as opposed to traditional plug-in hybrids, relies only on the electric motors to drive the wheels, using a smaller ICE engine (in this case a 1.5-litre turbo-petrol) to recharge the battery or provide power to the motors. In short, it drives like an EV, but for longer.In the case of the D19, a lot longer. While something like a Chery Tiggo 9 Super Hybrid is fitted with a 34kWh battery — meaning an all-electric driving range of around 170kms — the Leapmotor is fitted with a choice or 63.7kWh or 80.3kWh LFP batteries, with the latter delivering an all-electric driving range of up to 500kms under CLTC testing.We’ll lose some of that range by the time we convert the promise to WLTP in Australia, but that should still be in the region of 400kms before you need to plug it in.All up, the petrol engine and twin electric motors produce 300kW and 520Nm, enough for a claimed sprint to 100km/h in six seconds, though we managed closer to 10 seconds, admittedly with four adults on board.Built on Leapmotor’s 4.0 platform, the D19 REEV runs an 800v architecture (the BEV version is 1000v), which means fast charging. The brand hasn’t gone too deep into specifics, but promises 30 per cent to 80 per cent in around 20 minutes if plugged into a high-speed DC charger. Leapmotor also hasn’t confirmed the D19's arrival in Australia, but it’s no doubt coming, and could be here in as little as nine months.“In Australia, it could work,” the brand tells me. ”Definitely it's a flagship right now. And wherever there is appetite, we will try to be there. The localisation for overseas is nine-to-12 months after what has happened in China. If tomorrow morning we say, ‘you know what, we want D19’, that is nine months.”So, to the drive. Our wheel time was limited to a rented track near Leapmotor’s Chinese headquarters, and challenging it was not. Corners are an endangered species here, and the only time we got the D19 shifting its weight was through a slalom course the brand set up for us. And let's be honest, at more than 2.5 tonnes, there is a lot of D19 weight to shift, and it feels it. Like a lot of Chinese products, it feels soft in its suspension, giving occupants that sort of weightless bouncing feeling as though walking on the moon.The steering does have a little bit of nice weight to it, though, and the power delivery is nice and smooth. It doesn’t leap off the line, the D19, but rolling acceleration is ample, and it will keep pushing well north of 100km/h.But the short version is this is not set up to feel anything like a performance car. Comfort is the order of the day in this, and that can mean something entirely different in China to the rest of the world.Stellantis (of Alfa Romeo, Fiat and Peugeot fame, among many others) owns 51 per cent of Leapmotor International, and the brand says the cars launched outside of China are tuned in Europe, and drive very, very differently to the butter-soft ride quality demanded in Leapmotor’s home market.A Euro-style drive with China-style pricing and equipment could make the D19 a player if (though we think it’s ‘when’) the big bruiser arrives in our market.
Leapmotor B05 2027 review: International first drive
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By Andrew Chesterton · 05 May 2026
To describe the Leapmotor B05 as different to the Chinese newcomer’s other vehicles to date would be as obvious as describing night as different to day, or delicious beer as different to those powdered grass clippings sometimes referred to as matcha.The point is, it’s different. Very different.While Leapmotor products to date have focused on practicality and price as their raison d'être, the B05 is in fact not an SUV, is not overtly practical, and it has a sharper eye on performance than any model to have come before it.That’s the sales pitch for this electric hot(ish) hatch, anyway, which produces a Cupra Born-worrying 180kW and 320Nm in the flagship Ultra variant we’ve tested in China. Well, worrying for now. Cupra has its own flagship Born, the VZ, and it makes 240kW.Other important stuff? It’s rear-wheel drive, it promises a perfect 50:50 weight distribution, and Leapmotor has handed it to its European counterparts at Stellantis for its ride tuning.It runs an 800v architecture, which means fast charging, and there’s a choice of 56.2kWh or 67.1kWh batteries delivering a range of 500km or 600km under (the more lenient) CLTC testing.All of which sounds pretty good, no? There is a lesser version, which makes 160kW, but the Ultra is the one we’ve tested, albeit briefly, so far.So, let’s start with the key stuff, while the BO5 is confirmed for the end of the year, the Ultra is more likely to follow suit as a model-refreshing flagship.“With the Ultra version, there is probably some brand positioning, brand statement that could work for us. So, we are seriously considering it everywhere,” the brand told us.The other important caveat before we get into the drive experience is that the one we’ve tested isn’t all that indicative of the one we’ll get in Australia. We would get the European version, which Leapmotor says is very different. And not just in the way it’s tuned, but even in the positioning of the suspension components.“We have, after some assessments done in November, lowered the hook point of the suspension arms on the rear, and lowered the centre of gravity, and the car has totally changed behaviour. So if you drive a BO5 in Europe versus BO5 for China, it’s totally different," the brand says.So, with all of that in mind, let’s see what we’re dealing with. And first things first, the B05 doesn’t look like any Leapmotor product to have come before it. While the B10 and C10 SUVs have copped some criticism for what people say are bland looks, that’s not a claim you could level at the B05, which looks sleek and swept-back and properly sporty.I think it's one of the best-looking cars to come out of China in a hot minute, and should be the blueprint for Leapmotor's broader design language. I also think flip-flops are suitable everywhere but a funeral, so feel free to take my fashion advice with a grain of salt. But I like it, and so did my colleagues.That’s especially true of the Ultra, which gets a bigger front splitter and rear wing, while its grey-look 19-inch alloys are linked by gloss-black side skirting.Inside, there are sportier-feeling fabric seats up front which offer heating, cooling and a massage function, while a 14.6-inch central screen and an 8.8-inch driver display handles all your entertainment and driving data needs.So, to the drive. I need you to keep two important thoughts front and centre here. The first is what we covered above — this is the traditional Chinese recipe, not the European a la carte, and so it is different in feel to the one that will land in Australia.The second is that our ‘drive’ was limited to a rented circuit not far from Leapmotor HQ in China. Our time behind the wheel, and the track itself was as dull and straight as a Young Liberals convention. There might have been a corner there somewhere, but I couldn’t find it.What I can tell you, though — even with limited wheel time — is that this is the most convincing Leapmotor product I’ve driven to date.The power delivery is smooth and plentiful — if never truly exhilarating, and slightly slower feeling than its 5.9s sprint to 100km/h claim — and the whole car feels more buttoned down and polished than the C10 and B10.The steering is direct, too, and while the ride was a little too spongey, and body roll a little too intrusive through a short slalom course, I’m willing to hold my judgement until I drive the car we’ll actually be getting. It should also be cheap. Local costs are yet to be confirmed, but pricing in China is sharp. The entry-level 160kW B05 starts there at the equivalent of $AUD25,000. Don't expect anywhere near that pricing here, but I would be shocked if it wasn't among the cheapest warmed-over hatch offerings.The signs here are good, and it seems the combination of Chinese battery and manufacturing know-how and European ride and handling experience (which is the whole point of the Leapmotor International business, which is 51 per cent owned by Stellantis) looks like it’s about to bear fruit.
China's ultimate bargain coming to Oz
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By Andrew Chesterton · 04 May 2026
Chinese brand Leapmotor's most performance-focused model to date is firming for an Australian launch, with the B05 Ultra on the cards to follow the regular B05's launch later this year.
World's most annoying car key is gone!
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By Andrew Chesterton · 04 May 2026
Leapmotor has performed a welcome about-face on its controversial keyless entry system, with the brand to introduce physial keys on all future models.
China just fixed the plug-in hybrid
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By Andrew Chesterton · 30 Apr 2026
Leapmotor's flagship SUV, the D19, is firming for Australia, with the PHEV version promising a mega EV-only driving range that would free most owners from the daily plug-in.The D19 is a sizable – we're talking more than 5.2m in length and 1.9m in width – six- or seven-seat large SUV, that promises to be a more road-focused alternative to models like the Denza B8, LandCruiser 300 Series and Lexus LX.There are three powertrains on offer, including the choice of a dual-motor or triple-motor EV, or a plug-in hybrid REEV solution.It's the latter that is the most interesting, with Leapmotor fitting a giant battery to the D19 that would free PHEV owners from having to plug in every day.On board is a choice of 63.7kWh or 80.3kWh LFP batteries, with the latter delivering an all-electric driving range of up to 500kms under CLTC testing, which is admitedly known to be more leniant than Australia's WLTC measurements. That should convert to around 400kms in our market, which is still an impressive number for any plug-in hybrid vehicle. Speaking of our market, Leapmotor says the model "would work" in Australia, with a local launch firmly on the cards, and that – at its fastest – a launch here could occur early next year."The D19 is a car that has been, just this moment, launched in China. So we have already run the opportunity study for multiple regions," says Leapmotor International's Global head of Brand Strategy, Product and Marketing, Francesco Giacalone."In Australia, it could work. The Middle East, of course, is a market. South America is interested. "Definitely it's a flagship right now. And wherever there is appetite, we will try to be there. The localisation for overseas is nine to 12 months after what has happened in China. If tomorrow morning we say, ‘you know what, we want D19’, that is nine months."In terms of pricing, nothing has been confirmed for our market, but in China, the REEV model starts at 210,800 CNY, which is around $45,000 in AUD.Like all Leapmotor REEVs, the battery is used to power an electric motor or motors, which in turn is used to drive the wheels. Also on board the D19 is a 1.5-litre turbocharged petrol engine which is used to recharge the battery, or to provide power to the motor.In the D19, the system produces a total 300kW and 520Nm, and the brand is promising a total driving range of around 1300kms with a full tank and a full charge.Also available are dual-motor or tri-motor EV versions, making 410kW/625Nm and 540kW/745Nm respectively, and which promise a range of up to 720km, and a sprint to 100km/h in less than four seconds in the tri-motor variant.
Key MG4 rival approved for Australia
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By Laura Berry · 21 Apr 2026
Leapmotor’s B05 small electric hatch has been approved for Australia, according to Federal government documents seen by CarsGuide.Just six months after its Munich motor show debut, the Leapmotor B05 has now been cleared to land in Australia where it will rival the MG4 and BYD Dolphin.The Australian Federal Government Road vehicles standards website published approval details on April 20 of a vehicle made by Leapmotor with the “marketing designation” B05. Publishing the approvals notices is the normal transparent process for all imported vehicles and typically indicates that a model will soon arrive in Australia. The document also lists some details which help us find out in advance a few specifications of the upcoming vehicle. According to the published approval documents the vehicle is fully electric with a 160kW motor; it’s a four door, five-seater measuring 4430mm in length; and has multi-link rear suspension.That 160kW output is identical to the power produced by the two other electric models Leapmotor currently sells in Australia - B10 small SUV and C10 mid-sized SUVWhile the B10 and C10 are both SUVs the B05 is a small hatchback and Leapmotor boasts that it has a 50:50 weight distribution and that even balance is a good sign the car will be fun to drive.Ahead of the B05’s debut in Munich Leapmotor’s vice president Cia Li said the car would be a “gift” for young people "We want to build a dream car for young people who refuse to settle, conform, or be ordinary!" Li said.Leapmotor has been in Australia since late 2025 arriving first with the C10 mid-size SUV. Since then the brand has added the B10 small SUV and a hybrid version of the C10 to its local line-up.Pricing is yet to be announced for the B05 but Leapmotor will likely price it to be competitive with the MG4 which starts at $37,990 driveaway and extends to $55,990 for the top grade.
Leapmotor B10 2026 review: Design
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By Tom White · 17 Apr 2026
If there’s one thing you can’t complain about in 2026 it’s a lack of affordable electric vehicles. There are now plenty of zero-emissions options and they’re not the kind of short-range hatchbacks you might be imagining either.Cars like the Leapmotor B10 we’re testing here are cleverly-sized small SUVs with all the ingredients to set them up for success (and to keep away those ever-higher fuel bills).There are also options in this class and at this price-point from BYD, Chery and Jaecoo. But what sets this Leapmotor apart? Let’s take a look.For this review we’ve got a top-spec Leapmotor B10 Design. To get into one of these, you’re looking at a before on-roads cost of $40,888, which puts it in a similar league to the BYD Atto 3, Chery E5, Jaecoo J5 and MG S5.All of these rivals land in a very close price radius, with most of them being more affordable than our top-spec Leapmotor, but one key difference is its significant driving range.At a WLTP-certified 434km from its 67.1kWh battery pack, it should out-drive the Chery E5 (430km), Atto 3 (345km), and Jaecoo J5 (402km) to the same measure, and you’ll have to spend several thousand dollars more to get into the longer range versions of the Atto 3 or MG S5, at which point you may as well buy a Geely EX5 or GAC Aion V which have more range and are in a full size-category up.So, in some ways, the B10 Design is the ideal blend of spec, price and driving range in this entry-level part of the market.Like all Chinese cars, this Leapmotor small SUV is value-packed with highlights of its spec including generous synthetic leather interior trim, heated and ventilated seats, a 12-speaker audio system, panoramic sunroof (with powered shade, no less!), a 14.6-inch central multimedia touchscreen with wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto.Most importantly (aside from the aforementioned driving range) the brand has responded to negative feedback on the safety suite of its larger C10 SUV by adding a custom settings shortcut to the steering wheel of the B10, allowing you to pre-set a driving profile and activate it with the double-tap of a button.It’s also very much right-sized for city slickers. It’s a small SUV which is narrow enough to dart down laneways and easily fit in parking lots, with a big enough interior space for a growing family. At 182cm tall, I fit comfortably in all five seating positions.Drawbacks? There’s no key? More accurately, the brand expects you to use your phone as the key, with the only back-up being a credit card thing.You tap it on the mirror to unlock, and have to place it on the wireless phone charger to start the car. It’s weird and annoying and makes me wonder what would be so hard about having an actual remote with buttons.On the topic of buttons, the B10 hardly has any on the inside for controlling key functions. Almost everything has to be done through the central screen which is inconvenient at best and dangerous while you're trying to drive at worst.In addition, the strange flip-down cupholders are useless for holding anything which isn’t the right-sized bottle. So, get used to putting things in the armrest box or listening to them slide around in the tray below.For a car so focused on software, what’s on offer here is only just fine. It’s better than some of its rivals in that the menus and shortcuts are at least logically located, but it’s never fun scrolling through menus to find a setting which should have been a button in the first place.And the Leapmotor B10 drives surprisingly well. Like other cars in this class it’s got soft and spongy suspension, which makes it very comfortable but means it lacks body control in the corners. It’s not as overtly soft as the GAC Aion UT I drove recently, so there’s at least something to be said for it in the handling department. Doubly so, since the B10 is rear-wheel drive - an oddity in this small SUV segment.The steering is heavily electrically assisted and very light as a result, although it maintains a bit of feel to the front wheels.I’m sorry to report its rear-driven nature doesn’t exactly make it feel like a sports car. Cleverly-tuned traction systems make sure the 160kW/240Nm is strong but not wild enough to overwhelm the LingLong factory tyres.Sporty machine, this is not, but I walked away relatively impressed with how quiet, comfortable, and smooth it is. With the car set to my custom safety settings, it has no dealbreakers from behind the wheel.I drove mine in mainly commuter scenarios and beat the official energy consumption handily. My car was reporting an amazing 12.7kWh/100km in my travels. When I subtract the distance I travelled from the remaining range it landed at about 480km which is a lot more than the WLTP 434km official figure.Confusing things further, the trip computer has two methods for calculating range, static or dynamic, and both were way off. The static one reported the less accurate NEDC range pro-rata, and the dynamic computer consistently and drastically underestimated the remaining range. Very strange.This longer-range version of the B10 can charge at a maximum speed of 168kW on a fast DC charger which is plenty. Officially the charge time is around half an hour, and on a 75kW unit, mine charged from 10-90 per cent in around 40 minutes.
Revolutionary EV range for new hybrid SUV
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By James Cleary · 17 Apr 2026
Leapmotor has detailed its D19 large SUV, a battery-electric (BEV) and extended-range hybrid (EREV) the Chinese maker is positioning in the domestic market as its “flagship luxury SUV”, the latter version fitted with what is claimed to be the world’s largest EREV battery.With a maximum 80.3kWh capacity, the D19 EREV is able to cover up to 500km (CLTC) in pure-EV mode.Measuring just over 5.2 metres long, a fraction under 2.0m wide and close to 1.8m tall with a 3110mm wheelbase, the six- and seven-seat D19 is a potential challenger to the likes of the BYD Sealion 8, Chery Tiggo 8, Hyundai Santa Fe, Kia Sorento, Mazda CX-80, Omoda 9, Skoda Kodiaq and Toyota Kluger.The D19 EREV is a 300kW dual-motor AWD with a 1.5-litre turbo-petrol engine operating purely as a generator to charge one of two (CATL-sourced) battery options - 63.7kWh and 80.3kWh.The car’s 800-volt electric architecture means it can be charged from 30 to 80 per cent in a claimed 15 minutes.Offered in (410kW) two- and (540kW) three-motor variants, the D19 BEV runs a 1000V system and also offers two battery options - 99.6kWh and 115 kWh. Range varies from 620km to 720km (CLTC) and claimed 0-100km/h acceleration in the tri-motor version is “under three seconds”.Included features across the seven-model range (three EREV grades and four BEVs) include 21-inch rims, a 17.3-inch central media screen, 10.25-inch digital driver’s display, a 21.4-inch entertainment screen (with 6.0-inch control screen) for second- and third-row passengers, dual glass sunroofs, 23-speaker audio, an oxygen generation system (!) and an 8.1-litre fridge. ‘Digital Clock’ megapixel DLP projector headlights incorporate one million pixels and are able to project complex welcome animations (including a swimming whale) in front of the car, while a ‘Happy Pixels’ interactive screen at the rear not only incorporates the full-width tail-lights but can be set to deliver animations or a battery charge read-out.Soft-close doors, multi-way power seat adjustment, semi-aniline leather upholstery, wood grain trims, configurable ambient lighting and “velvet ceiling material” are part of a premium interior treatment.All D19 versions boast 337 litres of boot space with all seats upright and up to 2677 litres with the second and third rows folded in seven-seat models. A 176-litre front trunk includes a 220V outlet. Active crash-avoidance tech includes “28 assisted driving sensors” (including a Lidar on the roof) and autonomous emergency braking (AEB) operating between four and 150km/h.Suspension is alloy dual-wishbone at the front and five links at the rear with ‘Dual-cavity’ air-suspension providing continuously variable damping.Chinese-market D19 pricing ranges from ¥219,800 (~$45,000) for the entry-level 400 Premium Edition EREV to ¥269,800 (~$55,000) for the 680 Tri Motor Performance Edition BEV.Leapmotor’s local line-up currently consists of the pure-electric B10 small SUV and C10 BEV and plug-in hybrid medium SUV. And when contacted for comment on the D19’s potential for the local market a Stellantis Australia spokesperson told CarsGuide the newcomer is “on its radar” adding the brand will be “able to hopefully confirm new product in the near future.”
How will the car market change in 2026?
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By Tom White · 05 Apr 2026
Last year saw a paradigm shift in Australia’s new-car market.The introduction of the government’s New Vehicle Efficiency Standard (NVES) catapulted Australia’s emissions regime from the 1980s into the 21st century, and many brands began re-thinking their line-ups in Australia as the clock started on tough fines.Perhaps the biggest and most unprecedented change was the rise of the BYD Shark 6, which pretty much single-handedly proved the dual-cab ute class can be electrified, while the Chinese juggernaut stormed its way up the charts, helping to permanently re-shape the make-up of Australia’s favourite automakers.In the first months of 2026, the shift has continued. China has now become the number one source of new cars to Australia, finally taking over from Japan and Thailand.But what can we expect to look back on by the end of this year? What will change and how will your new car buying experience be re-shaped?Making predictions is always dangerous, but with another fuel crisis hitting hard, we can be fairly certain of at least a few outcomes — let’s see what we think.The dawn of the diesel-hybridChery’s headline-grabbing news from the past few months has been the confirmation of its upcoming diesel hybrid ute, codenamed KP31, for Australia.The upcoming and much-hyped Chery ute will bring what many buyers are asking for - diesel capability with plug-in hybrid fuel consumption.We know more about this upcoming ute thanks to its reveal in China under Chery’s commercial arm, Rely.It will use a new ground-up ‘Kaitan’ platform, and will maintain solid links to the axles - more like GWM’s Cannon Alpha PHEV than the BYD Shark 6.It will also be hoping to seize on the plug-in hybrid ute trend, which BYD has kick-started, and many of its rivals are now seeking to emulate. Whether the extra capability and allure of diesel is enough to make it the next hot thing in dual-cabs remains to be seen.More storied automakers will look to China for helpNissan has made it fairly clear that it will look to China for help, with its appealing range of Chinese-built vehicles benefitting from Chinese hybrid and EV know-how and rapid development cycles. The latter, which has become known as ‘China Speed’ in the industry, will cut the time it takes to do things that once meant long waits, like the conversion to right-hand drive and the various changes required to meet compliance regulations in obscure markets like Australia.No doubt Nissan’s most sought-after Chinese-built model will be the Frontier Pro plug-in hybrid dual-cab, long suggested by executives to be an emissions-friendly alternative to be sold alongside the Mitsubishi Triton-based new-generation Navara in the Australian market.Nissan’s Chinese portfolio doesn’t end there. The brand also has an array of well-received-in-China electric cars, including the N7 sedan and upcoming NX8 SUV as ideal replacements for its ageing Pathfinder, and NVES-friendly supplemental models to the hybrid X-Trail and Qashqai.Nissan certainly isn’t the only brand that might be forced to turn more to China to bolster its line-up. Ford, facing a particular cliff with NVES in the coming years thanks to its diesel-heavy sales footprint of Rangers and Everests might need to import cars like the Chinese ‘New-Energy’ plug-in hybrid Ford Bronco (related to the American Ford Bronco in design only) as a more appealing emissions-friendly option for its more adventure-curious buyers.Even Toyota, whose line-up is already heavily hybrid may need to turn to its Chinese joint-ventures for more price-sensitive zero emissions models like the GAC Aion V-based bZ3X which was recently announced in right-hand drive for the Hong Kong market. Watch this space.The top-10 will continue to be re-shapedAt the end of 2025 there were three Chinese brands in the top 10 in Australia: GWM in seventh position, BYD in eighth position, and MG in 10th.Already in the first few months of 2026, this ranking has continued to shift. BYD has already unseated GWM as Australia’s favourite Chinese brand and has vaulted Mitsubishi, landing in sixth position through the first two months of the year.This puts it within striking distance of Hyundai in a tightly contested race for a top-three position (there are less than 1000 sales between Mazda, Ford, Kia and Hyundai in the next four positions below Toyota), which BYD bosses bravely predicted for 2026.GWM is holding position in seventh, but Mitsubishi might not be able to hold it at bay for long.Chery is one to watch in 2026, as it has managed to leapfrog MG and clinch eighth position so far this year.Other more recent arrivals from China also have brave top-10 predictions. GAC could be the next brand to leap up the charts following in the footsteps of its contemporaries. While it may seem farfetched now, the Toyota-allied brand has access to the right products at similarly aggressive prices, with hybrids and plug-ins featuring heavily in its line-up, which the brand recently told CarsGuide is set to include a large SUV and ute before long.China-owned MG, too, will be playing defence, launching a range of more affordable vehicles as it looks to hang on to its top-10 position.Thailand is down, but not outThailand at various times has been one of the locations from which most Australian cars are sourced. Toyota, Honda and Ford have historically sourced many models from there, with the current top-selling Ranger, HiLux and D-Max all being sourced from the country.It has dropped down the list, as Chinese-built cars have increasingly been sourced for Australia from both new and historic brands. With even the Kia EV5 and Hyundai Elexio being Chinese-built Korean cars for the Australian market.But Thailand’s importance looks to be re-asserted as more Chinese brands establish strategic manufacturing facilities in the South East Asian auto hub.Obvious advantages are the fact that cars are built there on dedicated right-hand drive production facilities, freeing up space in Chinese factories to focus on other left-hand drive markets, while favourable government kickbacks, a free trade agreement with Australia, and a domestic market with an increasingly large taste for electrified vehicles will keep Thailand important for years to come.Big SUVs will be the next Chinese automaker battlegroundIn case you haven’t noticed, many big Chinese brands have shifted their focus. While utes and affordable hatchbacks and small SUVs continue to be all the rage, in their quest to actually generate profits, many Chinese brands have thrown huge amounts of resources into developing large luxury electric and plug-in hybrid models.The five-meter-long SUV space looks to be the next major battleground for these automakers, with Zeekr’s much-hyped plug-in hybrid 8X large SUV earmarked for an Australian arrival, and no doubt MG’s luxury IM marque will be looking to import versions of its LS8 or LS9.GAC has announced its next move will be a large SUV (likely the car known as the GS8 in China), while Leapmotor will move into new territory with its D16 and BYD’s Great Tang flagship have created some major buzz.Will they sell in Australia? With more fuel-conscious than ever new car buyers still crying out for more affordable electric options than the Kia EV9 for example (from $97,000) and Chinese automakers heavily incentivized to seek higher profit margins in markets like Australia, it seems possible we could be inundated with models like this in the latter part of the year.