Currently reading: BYD primes Bentley-rivalling Yangwang brand for European launch

Yangwang, launched in 2022, sits above BYD and Denza in the firm's pyramid

BYD has finally confirmed plans to launch its high-end Yangwang brand in Europe, more than two years after introducing it in China.

Yangwang is the Chinese company's high-end marque, sitting above the core BYD line-up and the new Denza premium brand with a range of tech-heavy, high-performance flagship models that are pitched as rivals to the likes of Bentley, Porsche and Ferrari

The brand was launched in 2023 with the Yangwang U8 - a huge range-extender luxury SUV that packs more than 1000bhp, outpaces the BMW M3, can turn 360deg on the spot and floats on water. 

That was followed shortly after by the U9 (pictured below), an electric supercar that cracks 240mph and can use its fully hydraulic suspension to jump on the spot or drive on three wheels. 

Both cars have been on sale in China for around two years, priced at the equivalent of £120,000 and £200,000 respectively, but despite showing both models at the Goodwood Festival of Speed last year, BYD did not officially confirm plans for a European roll-out.

But now, BYD vice president Stella Li has told Autocar that "our plan is that we will bring Yangwang into Europe", following the launch of the Audi-rivalling Denza marque early next year. 

Yangwang U9 front tracking

She stopped short of giving full details, but said the U8 and U9 are earmarked for European sale, as well as "more cars coming" including the U7 super-saloon - a quad-motor Lotus Emeya rival with 1250bhp and 1237lb ft for a 0-62mph time of 2.9 seconds. 

The move will make BYD the first Chinese manufacturer to enter Europe's top-rung luxury market, though it remains unclear whether the company plans to significantly undercut the likes of the Bentley Bentayga and Ferrari 296 on price. The costs of converting the Yangwang cars to right-hand drive, and exporting them to Europe where BYD's EVs face a 17% tariff, will mean they are likely to command a significant premium here compared to China.

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Felix Page

Felix Page
Title: Deputy editor

Felix is Autocar's deputy editor, responsible for leading the brand's agenda-shaping coverage across all facets of the global automotive industry - both in print and online.

He has interviewed the most powerful and widely respected people in motoring, covered the reveals and launches of today's most important cars, and broken some of the biggest automotive stories of the last few years. 

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ianp55 21 July 2025

Quite interesting design but please please don't use the Yangwang name here in Europe, doesn't quite seem the right name for a "Premium Product" I'm pretty sure that if anybody who bought such an expensive vehicle like this and said "I drive a Yangwang" might not get the reaction they expect

289 21 July 2025

I am sure Bentley are sh**ting themselves!!

xxxx 21 July 2025

Tibet, Uyghurs, Covid but we should really draw the line at this crime against humanity.

ianp55 21 July 2025

I'm pretty sure that if the attrocities committed by nation status in the past was a factor in what car that you bought then you'd have a very restricted choice wouldn't you? we'd probably be all driving Volvo's but oh hang on aren't Volvo owned by the Chinese and some of their cars built there

xxxx 21 July 2025

I think your key word is PAST. But you are correct on Volvo ownership