BYD is at it again, flinging open the doors to electrified motoring with a cheap, cheap, cheap PHEV — the SEALION 5. The brand’s (and probably the country’s) most affordable PHEV SUV is poised to pounce onto Australian roads in early 2026. It’s aimed squarely at fleets, families, and anyone sick of handing their pay cheque to the petrol bowser. Alongside a fleet of fetching EVs, the SEALION 5 has remarkable quality for entry level, let alone an entry-level PHEV. Use it the right way and the petrol engine is mostly there for decoration.

Legacy brands should pay very close attention. BYD is one of the world’s fastest-growing marques, and this is why — value, decent quality, and every tasty extra in the dress-up box.

Think of it as BYD’s DM-i Super Hybrid tech wrapped in an inconspicuous SUV that doesn’t pretend to be something it’s not. It’s practical, thrifty, and smoother than a shirtless tradie ordering a shandy after a hard day banging those big ol’ tools. Buyers get two flavours — Essential and Premium — both serving tasteful value without the usual hybrid price snobbery.

The headline grabbers? Sub-2.0L/100km economy, up to 71–100km EV-only range (NEDC), feather-light running costs, and fewer emissions than the average fleet dinosaur. Under the bonnet sits a 1.5L petrol engine working with an electric motor — giving you the EV feels with hybrid peace of mind. That means road trips won’t fill the driver with permanent panic attacks.

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ABOVE: BYD Sealion 5

Essential models deliver 156kW and up to 71km EV range from a 12.9kWh battery, while Premium variants bump that up a smidge to an 18.3kWh pack with a promised 100km EV range, sipping just 1.3L/100km. Both stretch to around 1,000km of total range, meaning you can road-trip from Bondi to Brisvegas on a single tiny tank.

Inside, things are unmistakably BYD: a slick 12.8-inch (or 10.1-inch in Essential) DiLink touchscreen, an 8.8-inch digital cluster, wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, plus a Digital Key so you can ditch the fob and tap in like you’re entering a fancy gym.

Practicality? A beefy 463L boot (expanding to 1,410L), 170mm ground clearance, and a turning circle tight enough to avoid 15-point turns. Safety is proper grown-up stuff: seven airbags, ADAS, and a 360° camera in Premium.

According to BYD Australia COO Stephen Collins, the SEALION 5 is designed to help businesses cut emissions and save cash — all while giving families a comfy, tech-loaded SUV that doesn’t drain the bank account. With rising fuel prices biting harder than a twink on tequila, it couldn’t arrive sooner.

Pricing drops closer to launch, but expressions of interest are open now, with orders from December. We expect the unassuming little BYD to be the belle of the balls — erm, ball.

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