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BYD V9 Large Electric Van Set to Launch in Australia – Daily Car News (2026-05-14)
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BYD V9 Large Electric Van Set to Launch in Australia – Daily Car News (2026-05-14)

T
Thomas Nismenth Automotive Journalist
May 14, 2026 6 min read

Morning Drive: BYD’s big Aussie push, Subaru trims EV prices, Nissan’s overland Frontier, and VW hits pause on an electric Golf

I took my first coffee standing up this morning, reading releases with one eye and the weather with the other. It’s that kind of news day: practical, a little scrappy, and quietly consequential. BYD is aiming at Australia’s work vans and family haulers in one swing, Subaru keeps carving dollars off its EVs while teeing up a smaller electric SUV, Nissan builds a Frontier that wants your long weekends, and Volkswagen says the electric Golf will have to wait. Also in the “well, that’s unexpected” column: Toyota built a robot that drains jumpers like it’s Steph in a scrimmage, and a boxy Chinese truck with Defender/FJ40 vibes is Europe-bound.

BYD’s two-pronged Aussie assault: one for work, one for the school run

BYD V9: a big electric van lining up Sprinter and Transit

According to CarExpert, BYD’s V9 is poised to land in Australia with one clear mission: take the EV fight to the Mercedes-Benz Sprinter and Ford Transit. The timing feels right. Every fleet manager I’ve spoken to lately is running spreadsheets on total cost of ownership and quietly begging for a van with real-world range, quick DC charging, and sensible service intervals. If BYD nails those three, game on.

Having dailyed a diesel Transit for a month last year shuttling bikes and camera gear, I can tell you the bar is high on packaging and ride quality. Vans are offices on wheels now—the seat foam, lane-keep smoothness, and where you stash your coffee all matter when you’re ten jobs deep by 3 p.m.

  • What I’ll be looking for: payload and tow ratings with a full battery, DC fast-charge peak and 10–80% time, active safety tuning in crosswinds, and cabin ergonomics for laptop life.
  • If BYD offers factory shelving/racking and a strong warranty, they’ll win tradies overnight.

BYD M9: a proper Kia Carnival challenger

Also via CarExpert: the BYD M9 has been approved for Australia, and that’s the first Chinese MPV I’ve seen that looks ready to walk into the Carnival’s local pub and order a schnitty without flinching.

Editorial automotive comparison shot: BYD M9 alongside Kia Carnival. Context: The BYD M9's approval for Australia as a contender against the popular K
The family people-mover game here is ruthless—school runs, weekend sport, and long coastal holidays. Sliding doors and serene NVH sell more cars than power figures ever will.

  • Watch for: adult-friendly third row, underfloor storage (prams and scooters are space vampires), rear climate that actually cools row three on a 38°C freeway, and second-row seat trickery.
  • If BYD nails dealer support and software polish, the Carnival finally gets a rival with teeth.
Model Type Target Segment Australia Status Main Rivals
BYD V9 Large electric van Fleets, couriers, trades Poised for launch (per CarExpert) Mercedes-Benz Sprinter, Ford Transit
BYD M9 Large MPV/people mover Families, ride-share premium Approved for Australia (per CarExpert) Kia Carnival, Hyundai Staria

Subaru’s EV shuffle: lower prices and a new small SUV

Solterra gets cheaper again—and there’s a new “Uncharted” on the way

CarExpert reports Subaru has cut EV pricing again, trimming thousands off the Solterra and the Trailseeker. It’s the right move in a buyer’s market where incentives shift monthly and competitors keep undercutting. A few owners have told me the Solterra’s quiet ride and all-weather poise are the keepers; the complaint list is mostly range anxiety on hot highway days and infotainment lag on start-up. Price helps ease both.

Editorial automotive photography: Subaru Solterra as the hero subject. Context: Subaru's recent price cuts on the Solterra electric vehicle.. Setting:

Also new: the 2026 Subaru Uncharted, a small electric SUV priced for Australia. Sounds like Subaru’s aiming below Solterra with something city-sized but weekend-proof. If they default to dual-motor all-wheel drive—as the badge heritage begs—and keep the footprint tidy, this could be the EV sweet spot for apartment garages and ski-weekend cred in one body.

  • Shopping checklist: claimed range on highway cycles, standard AWD or optional, roof-rail/load ratings, tow allowance for small campers, and software update cadence.
  • Pro tip: in suburbia, a shorter EV often “fits” your life better than range you’ll rarely use.

Nissan Frontier “Ultimate Build”: overland swagger, mid-size confidence

Both Car and Driver and Motor1 spotlight a 2026 Nissan Frontier “Ultimate Build” that leans hard into overlanding—think racks, camping kit, and serious trail hardware. The vibe is sovereignty-by-self-sufficiency: carry everything, camp anywhere, and get home without calling a buddy with a winch (though you’ll probably have one anyway).

I ran a mid-size pickup with a rooftop tent through the Mojave a couple summers back, and the lesson was simple: it’s not the tent, it’s the system. Storage that doesn’t rattle, lighting where you reach at midnight, recovery points you can find by feel, and tires that don’t chunk on sharp rock. If Nissan’s build showcases factory-backed solutions to those annoyances, they’ll sell as many accessory bundles as trucks.

  • Expect: all-terrain rubber, protective armor, modular racks, elevated sleeping options, onboard air, and proper recovery gear callouts.
  • What I’ll check first: suspension travel vs. payload when fully kitted, and how cleanly the wiring integrates with OE controls.

Maserati’s reported tie-up with JAC and Huawei

Per CarExpert, Maserati is working with China’s JAC and Huawei on new models. On paper, that could blend manufacturing scale with advanced infotainment/connectivity—the latter a historic weak spot for Italian luxury marques. The risk, of course, is brand dilution if the end product feels more commodity than couture. The win would be faster tech cycles and cleaner HMI without losing the son-of-Modena soul. I’ll reserve judgment until I can poke through the menus and prod a start button.

Electric Volkswagen Golf: not before 2030

Volkswagen’s CEO says the electric Golf has been delayed until 2030, per CarExpert. That’s a long hold for a nameplate that’s basically shorthand for “the default hatch.” It also keeps a brighter spotlight on VW’s current EVs to carry the load in the meantime. If you were hoping to replace your Mk7 with a battery-powered namesake next lease, that clock just ran long.

Wildcards: a dead-eye robot and a throwback truck

Toyota builds a lights-out shooter

Carscoops flagged Toyota’s latest CUE-series basketball robot dialing shots like it’s got a green release every time. It’s fun, it’s a flex, and it’s also very Toyota: relentless iteration until the thing just works. Somewhere a future lane-keeping algorithm smiles.

BAW 212 truck to Europe, with Defender/FJ40 energy

Also via Carscoops, a Chinese truck with equal parts old Land Rover Defender and Toyota FJ40 styling is headed to Europe. I’ve run vintage FJ trails, and the charm is half view, half mechanical honesty. If the 212 captures that feel without the oil drips and 4 a.m. carb fiddling, I’m listening—though Euro regs will make the powertrain choice the whole story.

Quick hits and takeaways

  • BYD’s twin push (V9 and M9) could reshape Aussie fleets and family garages if pricing and support are sharp.
  • Subaru keeps chiseling EV prices and adds a smaller Uncharted EV—smart in a market demanding value and footprint sanity.
  • Nissan’s Frontier build plays to its audience: capability you can feel in the first gravel mile.
  • VW’s electric Golf delay simplifies choices now but stretches brand nostalgia thin.

Conclusion

Today wasn’t about lap times; it was about living with cars. Vans that change workdays, EVs that get cheaper and more right-sized, a truck that makes Friday afternoon feel like a plan, and a Golf that asks for patience. I’ll take meaningful over flashy most days—and there’s plenty here to watch the next time you’re scrolling classifieds with a cup of something hot.

FAQ

When is the BYD V9 expected to arrive in Australia?

CarExpert says it’s poised to launch soon, targeting the Sprinter and Transit crowd. Exact timing and specs are still to come.

What is the BYD M9, and who does it compete with?

It’s a large MPV/people mover approved for Australia (per CarExpert), aimed squarely at the Kia Carnival and Hyundai Staria set.

Did Subaru really cut EV prices again?

Yes. According to CarExpert, Subaru trimmed thousands off the Solterra and the Trailseeker, continuing its value push in EVs.

What’s special about the Nissan Frontier “Ultimate Build”?

As covered by Car and Driver and Motor1, it’s an overlanding-focused Frontier showcasing serious off-road and camping kit—think racks, protection, and self-sufficiency gear.

When will the electric Volkswagen Golf arrive?

Per CarExpert, VW’s CEO says it’s delayed until 2030, so you’ll be waiting a while for a battery-powered Golf badge.

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Thomas Nismenth

Senior Automotive Journalist

Award-winning automotive journalist with 10+ years covering luxury vehicles, EVs, and performance cars. Thomas brings firsthand experience from test drives, factory visits, and industry events worldwide.

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