Nissan GT-R vs Chery Tiggo 7

What's the difference?

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Nissan GT-R
Nissan GT-R

2022 price

Chery Tiggo 7
Chery Tiggo 7

2026 price

Summary

2022 Nissan GT-R
2026 Chery Tiggo 7
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Twin Turbo V6, 3.8L

Fuel Type
Premium Unleaded Petrol

-
Fuel Efficiency
12.0L/100km (combined)

-
Seating
4

0
Dislikes
  • Discontinued in Australia
  • Lagging behind active safety
  • Dated digital graphics

  • Lacklustre driving dynamics
  • Software should be better
  • Plain and derivative design
2022 Nissan GT-R Summary

Even on its Australian swansong outing, the incredible R35 GT-R continues to perform beyond expectations.

Released in late 2021, the final batch of specials spearheaded by the T-spec in regular GT-R and SV in flagship Nismo guises sold out quickly and are already commanding twice and even thrice their recommended retail prices in private hands.

Nobody ought to be surprised. From its glitzy 2007 Tokyo Motor Show debut (on the eve of a global recession at that), the GT-R has been nothing less than an automotive force of nature, moving with calamitous calm to the beat of its own twin-turbo and all-wheel-drive thrum, like nothing else matters. The R35 has seen off countless assassins in its time, including the Lexus LFA and Honda NSX II.

Some 15 years later, this is what a GT-R in T-spec trim feels like in 2022.

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2026 Chery Tiggo 7 Summary

This is Australia’s most affordable plug-in hybrid vehicle.

It’s the Chery Tiggo 7 ‘Super Hybrid’ and you can have one for just $39,990 drive-away at the time we put this review together.

It beats the BYD Sealion 6, MG HS, and Mitsubishi Outlander when it comes to plug-in hybrid value then, but is it too good to be true?

Is the Tiggo 7 plug-in marred by caveats, or is it the new bar to beat when it comes to fuel-sipping hybrid value?

Stick with us as we find out.

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Deep dive comparison

2022 Nissan GT-R 2026 Chery Tiggo 7

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