MG ZS News
MG commits to one brand in Australia
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By Tom White · 22 Oct 2024
MG won't launch premium or electric sub-brands as it commits to one marque in Australia
Why MG won't follow in Toyota's footsteps
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By Tom White · 21 Oct 2024
Despite offering nearly its entire range as electric or hybrids, MG will keep combustion versions of its cars around.
Why MG's Cyberster didn't go full retro
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By Tom White · 17 Oct 2024
Retro is all the rage, but here's why MG went in a different direction with its Cyberster drop-top.
Next-gen MG ZS locked in!
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By Tom White · 17 Oct 2024
MG locks in launch plans for its most important model.
MG's best-seller just got a hot hybrid update
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By John Law · 29 Aug 2024
MG has fully revealed the new ZS small SUV and confirmed the outputs of its hybrid powertrain.
Cheap Chinese SUV gets a major glow up
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By Dom Tripolone · 21 Aug 2024
MG has given the best look yet at its next-gen ZS small SUV.
New cut-price small hybrid SUV confirmed
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By Dom Tripolone · 08 Aug 2024
MG’s new small hybrid SUV is just around the corner.
RAV4 knocks HiLux and Ranger off top spot
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By John Law · 05 Aug 2024
The Toyota RAV4 was Australia’s favourite vehicle last month, overtaking the incumbent utes and notching up 5933 sales. The Ford Ranger (4915) and Toyota HiLux (4747) trailed Australia’s favourite SUV, with Toyota once again taking overall honours. Mazda managed to keep its head above Ford with both maintaining a solid gap back to fourth-placed Kia. It was another record-breaking July with 99,486 registrations recorded enough to beat last year’s result by 2.7 per cent. Year-to-date, sales are at 731,898 — up 7.9 per cent on last year’s record numbers.“This is a remarkable achievement in an economy featuring widespread cost of living pressures,” noted Federal Chamber of Automobile Industries (FCAI) head Tony Weber. “It was also interesting to note that while sales in the Business and Government segments were up 13.7 per cent and 37.5 per cent respectively, Private sales were down 4.2 per cent,” added Weber. Hybrid sales were also buoyant up 88.4 per cent on last year with plug-in hybrid sales up 128.9 per cent. The share of electric cars fell slightly to 6.6 per cent. “While the first seven months of 2024 have exceeded expectations, the industry remains cautious about the future pending the implementation of the New Vehicle Efficiency Standard coupled with the economic conditions,” cautioned Weber.Toyota is riding the popularity of hybrid vehicles keeping its head in first place with 22,705 sales last month and climbing back to an impressive 22.8 per cent market share.The battle between Ford (57,371) and Mazda (57,023) is nail-bitingly close, the former having a slower July (7749 vs 8476) but managing to hold second place year-to-date by a slim 348 car margin. Kia remains in a strong fourth followed by Mitsubishi, Hyundai, Isuzu, MG, Nissan and Subaru.As for models, the Corolla hatch and sedan had an extremely strong sales month with 2688 registrations with its sparring partner, the Hyundai i30 (663), nowhere to be seen as the company waits for the updated hatch to arrive (though with Kia Cerato sales up significantly to 1592). Then came the Isuzu D-Max ute, Ford Everest large SUV, the Mitsubishi Outlander and Mazda CX-5 mid-size SUVs and the MG ZS small SUV. The Toyota Kluger rounded out the top 10, beating the LandCruiser to the punch. Tesla’s sales were weaker in July with just 1353 Model Y and 1239 Model 3 registrations not enough to see either model climb into the overall top 10. By state and territory, the Northern Territory, South Australia, New South Wales and Western Australia all improved their positions while the Australian Capital Territory and Victoria had small sips (less than two per cent). Sales in Tasmania were down 12 per cent.
A list of Australia's best-selling vehicles
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By John Law · 09 Jul 2024
interested in Australia's most popular new vehicles? Here is a list ranking sales from from 1-100 between January 1 and June 30, 2024.
The cars driving China’s dominance
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By Chris Thompson · 05 Jul 2024
China is now the third-largest source for new cars in Australia, beaten only by Japan and Thailand for cars exported here.