Hyundai is taking an interesting gamble. Instead of designing a global EV first and adapting it for China, the company built the Elexio specifically for Chinese buyers — and is now exporting it to compete head-on with the likes of Tesla and BYD.
Developed through the Beijing-Hyundai joint venture with BAIC Motor, the Elexio rides on a 400V version of Hyundai’s E-GMP platform. In Australia, it launches at AUD $59,990 driveaway in Elite trim, sitting almost dollar-for-dollar against the Tesla Model Y. A slightly cheaper base version is set to follow.

On paper, the Elexio makes a strong case. Its 88.1 kWh LFP battery delivers up to 562 km (WLTP), comfortably beating the Model Y’s 466 km WLTP figure in base rear-wheel-drive form. Power comes from a 160 kW front motor — not blistering, but adequate for daily driving. Charging tops out at 150 kW DC, allowing 10–80% in about 38 minutes. Not class-leading, but competitive.
Inside, the Elexio feels distinctly “China-first.” A massive 27-inch display stretches across the dashboard, signaling Hyundai’s willingness to embrace the tech-heavy aesthetic popular in that market. Compared to the more restrained interiors of other Hyundai EVs, this one feels bold and digital-forward.

But the competition is fierce. In Australia, BYD’s Sealion 7 has already climbed to the top of the EV sales charts, while Tesla’s Model Y continues to benefit from brand recognition, charging infrastructure, and resale strength. Hyundai’s challenge isn’t just specs — it’s perception.
The real question is positioning. Is the Elexio a global Hyundai EV, or will buyers see it as a China-specific experiment? If Hyundai prices it carefully and maintains strong after-sales support, it has the range and features to compete.
My view? The Elexio proves Hyundai is willing to rethink its EV strategy. Whether that’s enough to win over buyers in crowded markets will depend less on screens and range — and more on trust, value retention, and long-term brand confidence.
Source: Hyundai Australia


