Nio News

Charging may be out and battery swapping in
By Laura Berry · 17 Feb 2026
Electric car brand Nio hit a milestone this week, swapping 146,649 batteries in a single day, highlighting the ease of use and popularity of the new technology which could be the answer to long EV charging times. Battery swapping has been touted as a solution to one of the biggest problems facing electric cars - lengthy charging times. Chinese carmaker Nio has become the latest brand to embrace the tech, seeing it as the future of quickly having EV motorists back on the road with a full battery.Nio’s record happened in China on one of the country's busiest days, February 15, which is the start of the Spring Festival and Lunar New Year holidays.This time of year in China traditionally sees millions of people make their annual pilgrimages home to see families to celebrate, which explains why Nio has seen the huge uptick in battery swaps as people presumably head off on long journeys.Nio’s battery swap achievement follows the brand carrying out its 100 millionth battery swap on February 6 proving the tech has plenty of supporters choosing battery swapping over charging.Battery swapping technology is exactly as it sounds. An empty battery is replaced with a fully charged one. Of course the electric car must be designed to accommodate a replaceable battery, as is the case with some Nio models.Nio has a network of 3700 battery swap stations in China which can remove and replace a battery in three minutes with owners often renting batteries with the opportunity to upgrade to larger capacity units if wanted. Charging a battery on the other hand can take (on average) about 30 minutes using a fast charger.Nio isn’t the only manufacturer that has seen the huge potential and benefits of battery swapping. European auto giant Stellantis invested heavily in trialling battery swapping  before it scrapped much of its EV plans.Nio recently confirmed its plans to launch in Australia in 2026 and bring its Firefly small hatchback to battle the BYD Dolphin, MG4 and Mazda 2.The Firefly doesn’t have battery swap capacity, instead coming with a 42kWh Lithium Iron Phosphate battery delivering a range of up to 330km (WLPT) and a one–80 percent charge time of 29 minutes.Battery swapping in Australia is currently in the very early stages of development and it's unlikely carmakers will bring vehicles here with swappable batteries until sufficient infrastructure is in place to service them.
Read the article
New car brands launching in 2026 and beyond
By Jack Quick · 03 Jan 2026
2025 was the year of the new car brand in Australia, though things don't appear to be slowing down anytime soon.
Read the article
Top 5 Chinese brands we want in Australia
By Tom White · 28 Dec 2025
Surely, you'd think there's no more room in Australia's market for more Chinese brands, but we think these ones would still have a place.
Read the article
The top Chinese cars still not available in Australia
By Tom White · 24 Dec 2025
I know what you're thinking. Surely we don't need any more Chinese cars, but you'd better bet some of the best ones still aren't in Australia.
Read the article
Cheap BYD slayer headed to Oz
By Dom Tripolone · 19 Nov 2025
Chinese maker Nio is inching closer to launching its breakthrough EV Down Under.
Read the article
Why your car might not start in the future revealed
By Laura Berry · 08 Sep 2025
The rise of smart electric cars could see us fall into a future where we have to pay for nearly every function – even turning the vehicle on.Computers have been an integral part of vehicles since the 1980s, when engine management systems and electronics became more sophisticated, but it was always a car first and mainly mechanical with software added. In the past 10 years, however, we’ve seen computers become the architecture around which the car is built and aptly referred to as software defined vehicles (SDVs).Sure, that seems a natural part of the evolution of vehicles which have always been on a path of continual advancement from performance, efficiency and safety to comfort, convenience and entertainment. What could go wrong?The problem is that with cars essentially becoming just large electronic devices with many functions provided with software that’s updated over the air, the carmakers may choose to charge you for the use of them, or switch those functions off remotely if you don't pay up.It’s no different from your phone or TV and because you’re fine with paying for your Netflix and Spotify subscription, it stands to reason you’ll be okay with paying a subscription fee for car functions. Things such as heated seats, a head-up display, proximity unlocking, even the amount of power the motor makes. A most extreme scenario is failure to pay a bill resulting in the car itself not being able to be started. The safety implications of this are obvious and concerning at the very least.That last one seems unlikely but don’t underestimate the potential carmakers see in monetising vehicle functions. Electric vehicles have much fewer moving parts that need replacing, or fixing or maintaining than internal combustion engine (ICE) cars and manufacturers stand to lose billions of dollars they’ve made in the past servicing ICE cars. Subscription fees will be one of the ways they’ll keep that cash flow going.Some car companies are already charging for features through subscriptions. Tesla currently offers extra features such as live traffic updates, dash cam and music streaming through its subscription model. BMW offers heated seats among other features through subscription, and Toyota has made its remote start function available this way on some models. Mercedes-Benz provides traffic and sat-nav updates using subscription, and Volkswagen will increase the power output of its ID.3 electric hatch from 150kW to 170kW for a monthly or annual fee. Chinese carmakers haven’t embraced the subscription model yet in Australia, despite many of the brands such as BYD, Geely and Zeekr having increasingly software-defined these vehicles.This could be because the competitiveness of the Australian market is forcing the new carmakers into a price war where the value for money of Chinese EVs is all important in attracting buyers to what are still unfamiliar brands. But given enough time the brands will establish themselves locally and be in a position to almost certainly charge subscriptions for what they used to offer for the price of the car.As vehicles become even more software-orientated, we could see brands compete on the basis of technology in the form of entertainment and comfort features to performance and handling, even the physical features of the car which could change the colour or shades of the car through intelligent body panels, as we’ve seen in concepts such as the BMW iX Flow at motor shows over the past few years.New Chinese brand Nio has just confirmed its coming to Australia and overseas it offers subscription services to vehicle functions including the EV battery itself. Buyers can purchase the Nio electric vehicle without the battery and then pay a regular fee that allows them to swap to a larger battery for a greater range if they want, but it’ll cost them a bit more.Nio scored particularly well in a recent report from research company Gartner, which ranked car manufacturers based on the value added to their vehicles through software. Nine categories ranging from electrification, vehicle architecture and autonomy to connectivity, the user experience, and even how tech-savvy the executive team of the company are were rated.The big winners this year were Tesla, Nio and Xiaomi, with all three being headed by technology leaders who focused on monetising and adding value to their products. Mazda, Nissan and Toyota came in at the bottom of the rankings. These three established companies who helped define the modern motoring would be being left behind by carmakers whose software defines their vehicles. Will consumers actually pay for features that were once part of the costs of the vehicle? Would you? Well, if you could see the number of silly apps I subscribe to on my phone, the answer is probably yes. But maybe subscriptions could lead to cars that are even more affordable - a blank slate that allows a really low entry price with no pressure to add any features unless you wanted to. Oh wait, that’s exactly how the carmakers will sell it to us…
Read the article
Another Chinese brand confirmed for Oz!
By Dom Tripolone · 27 Aug 2025
Another cheap and cheerful Chinese electric car is headed our way.The Nio Firefly has been approved for sale in Australia by the federal regulator, which paves the way for the mini EV to land on our roads in the coming months.The Nio Firefly is a small hatchback measuring about four metres long, 1780mm wide and 1560mm high. This makes it slightly smaller than the BYD Dolphin and MG4 and a similar size to a Mazda2.It has cute retro styling reminiscent of the short-lived Honda e.The approval documents show two variants will be offered in Australia.Power comes from a single electric motor that makes 105kW and 200Nm, which is fed by a circa-42kWh Lithium Iron Phosphate (LFP) battery that provides a driving range of up to 330km via the benchmark WLTP test cycle.Its uses 14.5kWh/100km and offers 100kW DC charging for a 10 - 80 per cent charge in 29 minutes as well as either 7.0kW or 11kW AC charging with a vehicle-to-load (V2L) feature.The Firefly is also compatible with Nio’s battery swap technology. This allows owners to simply swap the battery when it has run low instead of recharging it. Nio claims this can take about five minutes, which is similar to refilling a petrol or diesel vehicle.No such battery swap stations currently exist in Australia, though.There is no word on how much it will cost or where and how it will be sold, with no news on a distributor or dealer network.In China it is priced the equivalent of about $32,000, which puts it on target to land here at less than $40,000.The writing was on the wall for the Firefly's local arrival when Nio announced it planned to expand to Europe and fellow right-hand drive markets Singapore and the UK.The right-hand drive version of the brand-new hatchback is expected to launch in October of 2025, according to overseas reports. This likely includes Australia now as the sale approval usually happens several months before cars land in showrooms.Homologation details published by the federal government hint that the Nio operation will be factory-backed with approval holders and contact details attributed to the head office in Shanghai, China.So this points to Nio following a similar route to brands such as Chery and Geely and launch via multi-franchise dealerships in capital cities.CarsGuide has contacted Nio's global operations for more Australian details, and will update the story with its response.
Read the article