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HomeAutomobileUltra-Cheap BYD Seagull's Optional LIDAR Feature Challenges Western Automakers To Step Up...

Ultra-Cheap BYD Seagull’s Optional LIDAR Feature Challenges Western Automakers To Step Up Their Game Once Again

Ultra-Cheap BYD Seagull’s Optional LIDAR Feature Challenges Western Automakers To Step Up Their Game Once Again

That said, you never quite get the full story when you run the price of a car through a currency converter, so let’s use the Tesla Model Y, one of the few cars sold in significant numbers in both countries, as a rough proxy. If you want all-wheel drive and the long-range battery, you’re looking at ¥313,500. While the specs aren’t exactly the same, in the U.S., a similar build will cost you $50,630 including destination. Excluding taxes for the sake of simplicity, you can buy about 3.45 lidar-equipped Seagulls for the cost of one long-range Model Y with AWD. 

And if I did my math correctly using the price of a comparable-ish Model Y in the U.S., that lidar-enhanced Seagull’s price comes out to a far pricier $14,675. Which is still way, way cheaper than any new car you can buy in the U.S., period.

But surely we aren’t talking about a real car here. It probably has a range of like 60 miles and needs four hours to charge in order to make it so cheap, right? Well, according to CarNewsChina, the 2025 BYD Seagull now comes with two battery options. The 30.08 kWh version offers up to 304 km of range, while the 38.88 kWh battery boosts range up to 405 km. That’s 190 miles and 252 miles if you just convert kilometers to miles, but China’s test cycle is more generous than the EPA’s. Doing an extremely rough conversion, in EPA testing, we’d be looking at about 140 miles of range for the base model and somewhere in the 180s.

That’s a lot less than the typical U.S. driver would accept from an EV, but we’re also used to EVs costing at least $30,000. I’m proof you can live pretty easily with that kind of range, even in a rural suburb without the ability to charge at home, but so far, I haven’t been able to convince anyone else to lease a 500e. Then again, if you could get a lidar-equipped Seagull for less than half the price of a 500e, maybe a tiny electric city car starts to make more sense in the U.S. 

In a lot of ways, it would be a perfect first car for a teen. Just not in the U.S., because we don’t get Chinese EVs, and the few we’re allowed to buy all cost big money unless you find an incredible lease deal. But at least while the U.S. twiddles its thumbs, China gets to have fun building and innovating cool new stuff. Must be nice.

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