2025 MG Hs Super Hybrid Reviews

You'll find all our 2025 MG Hs Super Hybrid reviews right here. 2025 MG Hs Super Hybrid prices range from $48,990 for the Hs Super Hybrid Excite to $52,990 for the Hs Super Hybrid Essence.

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 MG dating back as far as 2025.

Or, if you just want to read the latest news about the MG Hs Super Hybrid, you'll find it all here.

MG Reviews and News

Australia's best-selling car for 2024 revealed! Did the Toyota RAV4 beat the Ford Ranger, or did the Toyota HiLux make a comeback?
By Tim Nicholson · 06 Jan 2025
Australia’s top-selling car and the top-selling brands for 2024 have been revealed and it’s been yet another record year of sales.Last year, Australians bought 1,237,287 new vehicles, which represented a modest 1.7 per cent upswing compared with 2023 sales. It was enough to make it the biggest year of sales in Australian history.Utes and SUVs continued to dominate with just one passenger car - the Toyota Corolla - managing to remain in the top 10 best-selling models list.Almost 700,000 SUVs were sold in the calendar year compared with 270,000 light-commercial vehicles and just over 203,000 passenger cars (hatchbacks, sedans, wagons, sports cars and people movers).The top-selling model for 2024 was the Ford Ranger, repeating its 2023 win, despite a slight dip in sales to 62,593 (-1.2%).The Toyota RAV4 had its best sales year and came pretty close to toppling the Ranger, but had to settle for a still-impressive second place with 58,718 units, closely followed by its HiLux stablemate on 53,499.The Isuzu D-Max was the only other ute in the top 10, landing in fourth place with 30,194, and rounding out the top-five models was the Mitsubishi Outlander.Making up the rest of the top-10 models were Ford’s Everest, the Corolla, Mazda CX-5, MG ZS and the Kia Sportage. Check the tables below for all the figures.Toyota maintained its dominance in the industry, leading the charge with 241,296 sales, which is 12.1 per cent ahead of last year’s total.As expected, Ford leapfrogged Mazda to nab second place with a healthy 100,170 units, helped mostly by those solid Ranger and Everest numbers.Mazda dipped a little in 2024 (95,987) but remained well ahead of fourth-placed Kia on 81,787, while Mitsubishi (74,547) capped off the top-five brands.Hyundai (71,664) only just missed out on a top-five position, trailing Mitsubishi by 2883 units.MG also took a sales tumble but still stayed firm with 50,592 (-13.3%) for seventh place, while Isuzu continued to punch above its weight in eighth spot, recording 48,172 sales with just two models on sale.Nissan managed to make some gains in 2024, landing in ninth place with 45,284, and China’s GWM is now firmly a top-10 player having grabbed tenth spot with 42,782.The Chinese giant kept Subaru and Tesla out of the top list, with Subaru collecting 40,604 sales and Tesla sliding by 17 per cent to 38,347.The Model Y also just missed out on a top-10 spot for model sales, with 21,253 finding homes, a drop of 26 per cent.Despite the bumper sales year, the automotive industry’s peak body is forecasting a gloomy outlook and taking a swipe at the Federal Government’s New Vehicle Emissions Standards that kicked in on January 1.“While overall consumer preferences remain clear with SUVs and Light Commercial vehicles continuing to dominate the market and especially the top ten sales, many vehicles in these segments are either difficult or expensive to decarbonise. This will prove to be a significant challenge in meeting the extremely ambitious targets of the New Vehicle Efficiency Standard (NVES) which began on 1 January 2025,” Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries Chief Executive Tony Weber said in a media release.“The industry is responding to NVES by increasing the range of zero and low emission vehicles on offer. However, a continuation of current customer buying preferences will inevitably lead to the accrual of substantial penalties under the Government’s new scheme, which will create price inflation within the new vehicle market.”
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Most important new cars of 2025: From the BYD Shark 6-rivalling Ford Ranger PHEV, to the Toyota RAV4 hybrid, MG ZS, Kia Cerato replacement and more
By Stephen Ottley · 04 Jan 2025
What makes a car important? Depending on the brand, important can mean a lot of different things.It could be its profitability or maybe it’s the new technology it will bring or even a new image it could create for a brand.So picking the most important new models from Australia’s biggest brands isn’t always easy, but looking ahead to what’s headed our way in 2025 one common theme emerged - sales.It seems obvious, it’s important that the models each brand offers sell, but in the case of these five there is an extra layer of importance beyond just the volume they will or won’t do.To say the Ranger is important to the success of Ford Australia is an understatement. Sales of the ute account for more than 60 per cent of its total volume, and that’s before factoring in the Everest SUV spin-off.Ford has put a lot of money and resources behind this new plug-in hybrid version of the Ranger, knowing that it needs to cut its fleet emissions as the New Vehicle Efficiency Standard (NVES) is introduced in 2025.If Ford can get its marketing and sales staff to successfully push the Ranger PHEV it sets the brand up for a bright, lower-emissions future. But if they can’t, it could become a very expensive white elephant for the brand.Toyota hasn’t said too much on the record, but all signs point to a new RAV4 arriving by the end of 2025. The popular SUV usually has a six-year lifespan and the current iteration was launched in 2019, so in theory it’s time is up.What will we see from the new RAV4 - will it be more of the same or a shift upmarket like we’ve seen with the CH-R? The former is far and away the most likely, although don’t be surprised if inflation drives the price up slightly, as the RAV4 has become the brand’s bedrock passenger vehicle.There is a possibility it will follow the Camry and go for an all-hybrid line-up, but that would undoubtedly drive the entry-price up and Toyota is probably hesitant to do that if it can be avoided. It should have enough hybrids to help offset its HiLux and LandCruiser sales under NVES.Why is a small car so important in 2025? Especially when Kia is set to launch its all-new Tasman ute? Well, because of sales.The K4 is the replacement for the Cerato which, despite all the hype around SUVs and utes, is still Kia Australia’s second best-selling model (behind the Sportage SUV, of course). If the more polished-looking K4 carries a significant price rise, though, that could dent its market appeal and leave Kia with a sudden drop in its overall volume.Small cars like the Cerato and Toyota Corolla still do decent volumes, in large part because they are affordable and appeal to a sizeable number of people that don’t want a bigger car. Pricing the K4 right will be the most important challenge for Kia Australia in 2025, regardless of what happens with the Tasman.This new baby of the Hyundai family is due in the early months of 2025 and will bring with it a lot of expectations and new hope. While we’re still waiting for official details (at the time of publication) the speculation is it will carry a sub-$40k price tag. That would be a big deal for Hyundai in its fight against the influx of affordable electric small cars from China - such as the GWM Ora, BYD Dolphin and MG4.But more than that, the Inster needs to draw a younger audience to Hyundai. The brand has deliberately ditched its ‘cheap and cheerful’ image for a more premium range. But there’s no doubt many current Tucson, Santa Fe and Staria drivers probably had an Excel or Accent in their past.The Inster is unapologetically youth-targeted, so if it can be priced right it could be critical in reviving Hyundai’s chances with a fresh audience for years to come.The Chinese brand may be proudly celebrating its improved new generation of vehicles, including the recently launched ZS Hybrid+, but the reality is its volume aspirations are tied to affordability. Which is where the rest of the ZS will play such a crucial role when it arrives in early 2025.While the hybrid offers a good value package, its mid-$30k price range is a big step up from the sub-$25k entry-level ZS of old. Introducing at least two (but preferably three) sub-$30,000 models will be crucial to maintaining the ZS as the best-selling small SUV in the country.
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So you want an affordable hybrid car, what do you buy? New Suzuki Swift, MG3 and Toyota Yaris hybrid specs compared on paper
By John Law · 02 Jan 2025
It’s no secret times are tough. The cost of living is sky high and cars don’t seem to be getting any cheaper. 
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The most exciting new cars coming in 2025: Toyota HiLux, Kia Tasman, Mercedes-AMG CLE 63 and more
By Stephen Ottley · 01 Jan 2025
A new year brings a fresh array of vehicles for Australia — but some get us more excited than others.
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Which medium family SUV should you consider buying out of the Toyota RAV4, Kia Sportage, GWM Haval H6 and MG HS? We've put them head to head on paper so you don't have to
By Samuel Irvine · 31 Dec 2024
As the top vehicle class for Australians for six of the last seven years, the medium SUV segment is our nation's most competitive.
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Truly all-new cars released in 2024: What separates the BYD Shark 6 and Kia EV5 from the Toyota Prado and Suzuki Swift?
By Byron Mathioudakis · 27 Dec 2024
Many so-called “all-new” models aren’t all that new. In fact, a sizeable chunk are reskinned versions of what came before, with fresh sheetmetal over the same general hard points.
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John Law's Top 5 cars of 2024: From a game-changing electric car to near-perfect Toyota 4WD
By John Law · 21 Dec 2024
We're lucky, us car journalists. We get to drive oodles of exciting new cars throughout the year — sometimes so many you start to forget your favourites — so making this list was a nice walk down medium-term memory loss lane.
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How you could save more than $8000 on an electric car loan: Australian government announces low-interest loans making EVs such as the BYD Atto 3, GWM Ora and MG4 cheaper
By Samuel Irvine · 19 Dec 2024
The federal government will offer low-interest loans for Australian workers earning less than $100,000 to purchase an electric car.Federal Minister for Climate Change and Energy, Chris Bowen, this week announced the move, which will open up $150 million worth of funding through the Commonwealth Bank, cutting interest rates to 5.49 per cent per annum from between 6.49 per cent and 10.49 per cent.Essential workers – such as police officers, firefighters and nurses – will qualify for the loan regardless of income, which will only apply to new and used EVs worth up to $55,000.That covers EVs like the GWM Ora, MG4 and BYD Dolphin, as well as larger models such as the BYD Atto 3 and Leapmotor C10.The government claims the loans will help save Australians more than $8000 on a $40,000 loan with a seven-year term, on top of fuel savings.“Discounted loans help remove barriers to ownership, helping more Australians drive cars that can save them thousands of dollars a year,” said Chris Bowen.In addition to the loans, car buyers are already exempt from paying fringe benefits taxes (FBT) on EVs and plug-in hybrids purchased through a novated leasing agreement.FBT exemptions will end for plug-in hybrid cars on April 1 next year, though the deal will continue for EVs.The news comes as EV demand has softened in Australia as buyers increasingly look to hybrid and plug-in hybrid vehicles as an alternative.Using combined data from the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries and the Electric Vehicle Council, Australians have purchased 178,785 hybrid or plug-in hybrid models to the end of November this year, compared to roughly 70,000 EVs.Interested buyers can access the loans from today.
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Tough-as-nails new ute spied: Our first look at incoming MG ute to rival high-trim versions of Ford Ranger, Toyota HiLux, Kia Tasman and Volkswagen Amarok?
By Samuel Irvine · 19 Dec 2024
An MG-badged version of the SAIC Motor Maxus Interstellar – to be sold locally as the LDV Terron 9 – has been spotted in China, seemingly giving us a first look at the incoming MG ute.
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Has the number of Chinese-made cars peaked in Australia? Weak sales from Tesla, MG and LDV sees Chinese deliveries dip as Japan, Thailand strengthen their leads with the Toyota HiLux, RAV4 and Ford Ranger | Analysis
By Samuel Irvine · 17 Dec 2024
If there has been a single story that has come out of the automotive world over the past five years, it has been the rise of China.
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