Maserati Ghibli vs BYD Atto 2

What's the difference?

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Maserati Ghibli
Maserati Ghibli

2021 price

BYD Atto 2
BYD Atto 2

$31,990 - $35,990

2026 price

Summary

2021 Maserati Ghibli
2026 BYD Atto 2
Safety Rating

Engine Type
S/C & T/C V8, 3.8L

Fuel Type
Premium Unleaded Petrol

-
Fuel Efficiency
12.3L/100km (combined)

-
Seating
5

0
Dislikes
  • Seats lovely but a bit firm
  • Confused sense of identity
  • Expensive

  • Tech can be fiddly
  • Driving dynamics are't stellar
  • Is 345km enough range?
2021 Maserati Ghibli Summary

Maseratis make a certain amount of sense to a certain kind of person. As the folks who run the brand in Australia will tell you, its buyers are the kind of people who’ve driven German premium vehicles, but find themselves wanting something more. 

They are older, wiser and, most importantly, richer. 

While it’s easy to see the high-end lure of Maserati’s Italian sex appeal styling and luxuriously appointed interiors, they’ve always struck me as cruisers rather than bruisers. 

Again, they’re for the older, more generously padded buyer, which makes the Trofeo range something of an oddity. Maserati says its Trofeo badge - seen here on its mid-sized sedan, the Ghibli, which sits below the vast Quattroporte limousine (and side on to the other car in the range, the SUV Levante) - is all about the "Art of Fast". 

And it certainly is fast, with a whopping V8 driving the rear wheels. It’s also completely bonkers, a luxury car with the heart of a track-chomping monster. 

Which is why Maserati chose to launch it at the Sydney Motorsport Park complex, where we could see just how quick and crazy it is. 

The big question is, why? And perhaps who, because it’s hard to imagine who wants, or needs, a car with such severe schizophrenia. 

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2026 BYD Atto 2 Summary

There has never been a better time to be shopping for an electric SUV in Australia, with the avalanche of Chinese brands constantly smashing through the price floor as they bid for the title of Australia’s cheapest.

MG led the charge with its S5, which is $40,490, drive-away. Then Leapmotor upped (or downed?) the ante with its B10 with a $38,990, drive-away, price tag. And now BYD has knocked them both out with its Atto 2, officially Australia’s cheapest electric SUV (at least for now), with a MSRP of $31,990, which, in NSW, translates to a drive-away cost of less than $35K.

Cheap is one thing. But cheerful? Let’s find out, shall we?

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Deep dive comparison

2021 Maserati Ghibli 2026 BYD Atto 2

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