BYD, Xpeng, And More EV Makers Are Raising Prices In China
Có thể bạn quan tâm
Subscribe to the TechNode Briefing Newsletter
Every Wednesday and Friday, TechNode’s Briefing newsletter delivers a roundup of the most important news in China tech, straight to your inbox.
Sign upSubscribe to TechNode Briefing Newsletter
Every Wednesday and Friday, TechNode’s Briefing newsletter delivers a roundup of the most important news in China tech, straight to your inbox.
Sign in with Google Or Subscribe Sign in to an existing accountBy signing up, you agree to our privacy policy.
Thank you for registering!
An account was already registered with this email.Please check your inbox for an authentication link.
Support Us
Your support helps TechNode continue to provide credible, on-the-ground journalism and industry insights about the Chinese tech industry.
One-time Monthly Annually One-time $60 $120 $365 Other Donation amount $ Monthly $10 $20 $30 Other Donation amount per month $ Annually $60 $120 $365 Other Donation amount per year $Your contribution is appreciated.
Donate Now Close Search for: Search Close Skip to content
Every Wednesday and Friday, TechNode’s Briefing newsletter delivers a roundup of the most important news in China tech, straight to your inbox.
Sign upSince last week, more than 10 Chinese electric car makers have raised prices for their EV models, prompted by the significant increase in raw material costs. Analysts say that the price hikes will not hurt vehicle sales in the short term due to an already high order backlog, but also predict that companies will change prices more often in the future to meet their sales targets.
Some of the biggest names in the EV market have led the price hike. In March, Tesla raised prices for two premium versions of its China-made Model Y electric crossover twice in less than a week. Chinese EV giant BYD on March 15 announced it was lifting prices for most of its vehicle lineups, after it upped prices two month previously to address government EV subsidy cuts. Among the 11 carmakers that raised their prices in recent weeks, EV startup Leapmotor enacted the biggest hike, increasing its list prices by as much as 15%, or RMB 30,000 ($4,710), while state-owned automaker SAIC introduced the lowest price rises on average, with a 1.2% hike, or RMB 2,000, according to data compiled by TechNode.
Why the price hikes?
A major reason behind the rise in EV prices is the “very strong” growth in the Chinese market, making it harder for raw material suppliers to keep up with demand, Peter Li, a Credit Suisse analyst, said on Tuesday during the company’s Asian Investment Conference.
EV battery makers have been scrambling to secure supplies of key ingredients, such as lithium. In mid-January, the cost of battery-grade lithium carbonate was 569% higher compared to two years ago, according to figures from Benchmark Mineral Intelligence. Lead battery maker CATL raised its price by RMB 20,000, Chinese media Yicai reported Monday.
Major battery suppliers have now directly linked their pricing mechanisms to raw material price changes rather than adjusting their rates on an annual basis, due to the volatile commodity market. “That’s why we are seeing further battery price hikes in the second quarter,” Li said, adding that the trend will continue in the next two years, pushing potential price surges throughout the industry value chain from material suppliers to battery makers to car manufacturers.
Credit Suisse expect the lithium supply deficit to be expanded from 37,000 tonnes in 2021 to 101,000 tonnes this year, around 18% of global demand, and commodities prices to remain high at least until 2024, due to EVs’ growing popularity in China. Sales of new energy vehicle sales (NEVs) in China, mainly EVs and plug-in hybrids, skyrocketed 154% year on year to 3.52 million units in 2021, according to official figures.
Does the future hold more frequent price changes?
Analysts anticipate the price hike won’t have a major impact on automakers’ deliveries in the short term, thanks to major players enjoying massive backlogs of orders in the market.
The waiting time for new orders of Tesla’s locally-made Model 3 sedan is now 20 to 24 weeks, compared with only six weeks last April, while the waiting time for Xpeng’s P7 is at least 12 weeks. BYD chairman Wang Chuanfu said in November that the company’s orders for its various models had reached an all-time high of 200,000 and it had to spend four months on average to deliver a vehicle, Chinese media reported.
In the longer term, Chinese EV makers could implement more flexible pricing strategies, lowering prices at the cost of their margins to ensure growth, if the current high demand for EVs slows down later this year. Some automakers are already preparing for more pricing adjustments, which means they could provide promotions or discounts to maintain their volume targets if demand starts to weaken during the second half of this year, Wang Bin, a Credit Suisse analyst, said at the investment conference.
EV makers could also change prices more frequently to attract new buyers, as the industry is transitioning towards a revenue model based on software subscription services rather than car sales, said Lu Shengyun, an independent adviser to entrepreneurs and CEOs. Passenger EV sales could grow by 84% year on year to 5.5 million vehicles this year, industry group the China Passenger Car Association said in January.
Electric vehicles “is a strategically important direction for automakers. They will sacrifice margin to offset the impact from rising material cost,” Wang added.
Ward Zhou contributed to the reporting of this story.
Support TechNode
With a small team, TechNode provides timely news and thoughtfully researched articles for worldwide readers interested in learning more about the Chinese tech industry.
One-time Monthly Annually One-time $60 $120 $365 Other Donation amount $ Monthly $10 $20 $30 Other Donation amount per month $ Annually $60 $120 $365 Other Donation amount per year $Your contribution is appreciated.
Donate NowRelated
Jill Shen
Jill Shen was TechNode's auto tech reporter until August 2025. She currently covers Chinese AI and EV as a freelancer. Connect with her via e-mail: [email protected] or Twitter: @jill_shen_sh More by Jill Shen
Latest stories
- China’s Super Computing Network offers 10 million free tokens per user in OpenClaw promotion Mar 12, 2026
- Baidu launches zero-deployment OpenClaw service DuClaw Mar 11, 2026
- BYD weighs entry into Formula One and endurance racing, report says Mar 11, 2026
- Tencent is said to be developing a top-secret AI agent project for WeChat Mar 11, 2026
- China cyber emergency center flags security risks in AI agent OpenClaw Mar 11, 2026
- Xiaohongshu targets AI-managed accounts in push to clean up content Mar 11, 2026
Popular articles
Sign in
Close Sign in with Google OrEnter the code sent to your email.
Email address
Enter your password
Sign in by entering the code we sent to , or clicking the magic link in the email.
Continue Resend code Email me a one-time code instead Forgot password Create an account Sign in to an existing account Go back Continue Set a password (optional)Link Copy link
Từ khóa » Xpeng Vs Nio Vs Li Vs Byd
-
Nio Lags Xpeng, Li Auto As Buffett-Backed BYD More Than Triples ...
-
China EV Sales: Nio Stock, Li Auto, Xpeng Rise
-
BYD Vs Tesla Vs Xpeng Vs NIO Vs Li Auto - Stock Comparison
-
Comparing Tesla BYD Nio Xpeng And Li Auto
-
Here Are The Best-selling Electric Cars In China So Far This Year - CNBC
-
Nio, Xpeng And Li Auto: How Do Chinese EV Stocks Compare?
-
Chinese EV Darlings Nio, Xpeng And Li Auto See Their Stocks Suffer ...
-
Which Chinese Electric Car Company Has The Slickest Fundraising ...
-
NIO Vs. BYD: The Battle For China's Electric Car Soul Is On
-
Nio Vs. XPeng Vs. Li Auto: How 2022 Is Shaping Up For Chinese EV ...
-
Nio Vs. XPeng Vs. Li Auto: How October EV Deliveries Stack Up
-
April Deliveries: How Does NIO Compare To XPeng And Li Auto?
-
NIO, XPeng And Li Auto Deliveries Set A Record. That ... - Barron's
-
NIO Stock Jumps As Chinese EV Demand Returns. It's ... - Barron's
Tencent launches OpenClaw-like workplace AI agent WorkBuddy
MWC 2026: Tecno unveils ultra-slim modular magnetic concept phone, swappable components in minutes
Tencent reportedly tests QClaw AI agent with one-click OpenClaw deployment
OpenClaw sparks boom as Chinese firms race into the AI agent era
Baidu launches zero-deployment OpenClaw service DuClaw
MWC 2026: ZTE debuts pet-style AI companion iMoochi