Mercedes-Benz G-Class vs MG U9

What's the difference?

VS
Mercedes-Benz G-Class
Mercedes-Benz G-Class

$214,900 - $413,561

2025 price

MG U9
MG U9

2026 price

Summary

2025 Mercedes-Benz G-Class
2026 MG U9
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Not Applicable, 0.0L

Fuel Type
Electric

-
Fuel Efficiency
0.0L/100km (combined)

-
Seating
5

0
Dislikes
  • Firm ride
  • No spare tyre on Edition One
  • Tailgate door opens right-to-left

  • Unknown on-road manners
  • Limited payload
  • Unproven brand in the ute market
2025 Mercedes-Benz G-Class Summary

Imagine jumping in the time machine, zapping back to the late 1970s and bringing the team that produced the original Mercedes-Benz G-Wagen into 2025 and showing them where their creation has landed close to half a century later.  

They’d be amazed a vehicle looking so much like their military-focused, first-generation model even existed! And once they’d absorbed that incredible fact they’d be stunned to see what lurks under its familiar bodywork. 

Because this is the most recent iteration of what’s now referred to as the G-Glass, the pure-electric G580 featuring four individually controlled electric motors - one at each wheel - collectively producing enough energy to power a small town. 

Stay with us as we explore this take-no-prisoners EV 4WD that has multiple show-stopping, high-tech party tricks lurking up its sleeve.  

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2026 MG U9 Summary

Even amid the near-constant discussion of utes in Australia, 2025 has been a momentous year. We’ve already seen the arrival of the BYD Shark 6, Ford Ranger PHEV and Kia Tasman. Now comes the latest new contender looking to shake-up the establishment - MG.

The formerly-British-turned-Chinese brand has made no secret of the fact its Australian aspirations involve challenging Toyota, Ford and Mazda at the top of the sales charts. To achieve that it knew it needed a ute and needed one quickly.

Luckily for MG, it had a way to shortcut the development and get a new ute into the market in next to no time. It was called the LDV Terron 9, an upsized ute from the commercial vehicles division of SAIC, parent company to MG.

In a throwback to the days of ‘badge engineering’ (if you don’t remember, kids, google ‘Toyota Lexcen’ or ‘Holden Apollo’), the LDV swapped badges and became the MG U9. To be fair, there are some key technical differences that we’ll explain, but the majority of the two vehicles are shared, saving time and money to help MG enter the ute contest as quickly as it could.

The LDV arrived in Australia a few weeks before the MG, but the arrival of the U9 marks a key moment, not only for the ute market, but also the brand itself. MG Australia boss Peter Ciao admitted this is a watershed moment, when MG stops focusing on small vehicles like the MG3, MG4 and ZS and takes on the literal big boys of the car industry.

Before we dive into the details, it must be noted at this point the cars we tested were pre-production examples and while mechanically the same as the vehicles which will ultimately arrive in showrooms, the trim and equipment was not the final version.

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Deep dive comparison

2025 Mercedes-Benz G-Class 2026 MG U9

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