
2025 Chery Tiggo 4 Hybrid will be Australia's cheapest HEV
That makes Australia's cheapest SUV nameplate also the most affordable hybrid on sale in Australia. The Tiggo 4 Hybrid undercuts the cheapest Toyota Yaris Hybrid hatch ($28,990 before on-road costs) and GWM Haval Jolion HEV small SUV ($32,990 drive-away).
Two variants will be available in Australia from July, including the base Urban ($29,990 D/A) and the flagship Ultimate ($34,990 D/A) – representing a $6000 premium for the electrified drivetrain.
Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now.
Unlike the recently announced Chery Tiggo 7 Super Hybrid and Chery Tiggo 8 Super Hybrid, the Tiggo 4 Hybrid is not a plug-in hybrid (PHEV) but a series-parallel hybrid like the Yaris Cross Hybrid and Jolion HEV.
Both Tiggo 4 Hybrid model grades will use a 71kW/118Nm 1.5-litre petrol engine teamed with an electric motor for combined outputs of 150kW/310Nm driving the front wheels.
With a 1.83kWh battery and combined fuel consumption of 5.4L/100km – compared to 7.3L/100km for the petrol-only version – the Tiggo 4 Hybrid has a claimed driving range of 1000km per tank.
It also quotes a 9.4-second 0-100km/h acceleration time, which is 1.2 seconds quicker than the petrol version.
Chery Australia hasn't announced further specifications for Australia, but the entry-level petrol Tiggo 4 Urban comes standard with 17-inch alloy wheels, keyless entry, dual 10.25-inch digital displays and Apple CarPlay/Android Auto smartphone connectivity.
In petrol guise, the Tiggo 4 Ultimate adds 18-inch alloys, heated front seats, a 360-degree surround camera and power sunroof.
Standard driver assist tech for the petrol Tiggo 4 includes autonomous emergency braking (AEB), adaptive cruise control, blind-spot monitoring and rear cross-traffic assist for both model grades.
The Tiggo 4 is currently Chery Australia's best-selling vehicle – making up more than half of its nearly 12,000 sales to the end of May this year – and the nation's fourth-best selling small SUV behind the Hyundai Kona, MG ZS, and the Jolion.
While the Kona is priced from $32,500 before on-roads, the cheapest Kona Hybrid starts at $36,500. Meantime, the MG ZS starts at $26,990 drive-away but the cheapest hybrid variant starts at $33,990 drive-away, and the Haval Jolion starts at $26,990 drive-away but the most affordable hybrid version costs $32,990 drive-away.
The Chery Tiggo 4 Hybrid is now the third hybrid SUV confirmed by the company to arrive next month, with the plug-in Chery Tiggo 7 Super Hybrid mid-size SUV and seven-seat Chery Tiggo 8 Super Hybrid large SUV set to arrive in mid-July, ahead of the Tiggo 4 Hybrid.
Full local specification details are expected to be announced ahead of the Tiggo 4 Hybrid's late-July arrival in Australia.
MORE: Everything Chery Tiggo 4
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
The 2025 Chery Tiggo 4 Hybrid small SUV is scheduled to arrive late next month, and the two-grade lineup has today been priced from $29,990 drive-away.
That makes Australia's cheapest SUV nameplate also the most affordable hybrid on sale in Australia. The Tiggo 4 Hybrid undercuts the cheapest Toyota Yaris Hybrid hatch ($28,990 before on-road costs) and GWM Haval Jolion HEV small SUV ($32,990 drive-away).
Two variants will be available in Australia from July, including the base Urban ($29,990 D/A) and the flagship Ultimate ($34,990 D/A) – representing a $6000 premium for the electrified drivetrain.
Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now.
Unlike the recently announced Chery Tiggo 7 Super Hybrid and Chery Tiggo 8 Super Hybrid, the Tiggo 4 Hybrid is not a plug-in hybrid (PHEV) but a series-parallel hybrid like the Yaris Cross Hybrid and Jolion HEV.
Both Tiggo 4 Hybrid model grades will use a 71kW/118Nm 1.5-litre petrol engine teamed with an electric motor for combined outputs of 150kW/310Nm driving the front wheels.
With a 1.83kWh battery and combined fuel consumption of 5.4L/100km – compared to 7.3L/100km for the petrol-only version – the Tiggo 4 Hybrid has a claimed driving range of 1000km per tank.
It also quotes a 9.4-second 0-100km/h acceleration time, which is 1.2 seconds quicker than the petrol version.
Chery Australia hasn't announced further specifications for Australia, but the entry-level petrol Tiggo 4 Urban comes standard with 17-inch alloy wheels, keyless entry, dual 10.25-inch digital displays and Apple CarPlay/Android Auto smartphone connectivity.
In petrol guise, the Tiggo 4 Ultimate adds 18-inch alloys, heated front seats, a 360-degree surround camera and power sunroof.
Standard driver assist tech for the petrol Tiggo 4 includes autonomous emergency braking (AEB), adaptive cruise control, blind-spot monitoring and rear cross-traffic assist for both model grades.
The Tiggo 4 is currently Chery Australia's best-selling vehicle – making up more than half of its nearly 12,000 sales to the end of May this year – and the nation's fourth-best selling small SUV behind the Hyundai Kona, MG ZS, and the Jolion.
While the Kona is priced from $32,500 before on-roads, the cheapest Kona Hybrid starts at $36,500. Meantime, the MG ZS starts at $26,990 drive-away but the cheapest hybrid variant starts at $33,990 drive-away, and the Haval Jolion starts at $26,990 drive-away but the most affordable hybrid version costs $32,990 drive-away.
The Chery Tiggo 4 Hybrid is now the third hybrid SUV confirmed by the company to arrive next month, with the plug-in Chery Tiggo 7 Super Hybrid mid-size SUV and seven-seat Chery Tiggo 8 Super Hybrid large SUV set to arrive in mid-July, ahead of the Tiggo 4 Hybrid.
Full local specification details are expected to be announced ahead of the Tiggo 4 Hybrid's late-July arrival in Australia.
MORE: Everything Chery Tiggo 4
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
The 2025 Chery Tiggo 4 Hybrid small SUV is scheduled to arrive late next month, and the two-grade lineup has today been priced from $29,990 drive-away.
That makes Australia's cheapest SUV nameplate also the most affordable hybrid on sale in Australia. The Tiggo 4 Hybrid undercuts the cheapest Toyota Yaris Hybrid hatch ($28,990 before on-road costs) and GWM Haval Jolion HEV small SUV ($32,990 drive-away).
Two variants will be available in Australia from July, including the base Urban ($29,990 D/A) and the flagship Ultimate ($34,990 D/A) – representing a $6000 premium for the electrified drivetrain.
Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now.
Unlike the recently announced Chery Tiggo 7 Super Hybrid and Chery Tiggo 8 Super Hybrid, the Tiggo 4 Hybrid is not a plug-in hybrid (PHEV) but a series-parallel hybrid like the Yaris Cross Hybrid and Jolion HEV.
Both Tiggo 4 Hybrid model grades will use a 71kW/118Nm 1.5-litre petrol engine teamed with an electric motor for combined outputs of 150kW/310Nm driving the front wheels.
With a 1.83kWh battery and combined fuel consumption of 5.4L/100km – compared to 7.3L/100km for the petrol-only version – the Tiggo 4 Hybrid has a claimed driving range of 1000km per tank.
It also quotes a 9.4-second 0-100km/h acceleration time, which is 1.2 seconds quicker than the petrol version.
Chery Australia hasn't announced further specifications for Australia, but the entry-level petrol Tiggo 4 Urban comes standard with 17-inch alloy wheels, keyless entry, dual 10.25-inch digital displays and Apple CarPlay/Android Auto smartphone connectivity.
In petrol guise, the Tiggo 4 Ultimate adds 18-inch alloys, heated front seats, a 360-degree surround camera and power sunroof.
Standard driver assist tech for the petrol Tiggo 4 includes autonomous emergency braking (AEB), adaptive cruise control, blind-spot monitoring and rear cross-traffic assist for both model grades.
The Tiggo 4 is currently Chery Australia's best-selling vehicle – making up more than half of its nearly 12,000 sales to the end of May this year – and the nation's fourth-best selling small SUV behind the Hyundai Kona, MG ZS, and the Jolion.
While the Kona is priced from $32,500 before on-roads, the cheapest Kona Hybrid starts at $36,500. Meantime, the MG ZS starts at $26,990 drive-away but the cheapest hybrid variant starts at $33,990 drive-away, and the Haval Jolion starts at $26,990 drive-away but the most affordable hybrid version costs $32,990 drive-away.
The Chery Tiggo 4 Hybrid is now the third hybrid SUV confirmed by the company to arrive next month, with the plug-in Chery Tiggo 7 Super Hybrid mid-size SUV and seven-seat Chery Tiggo 8 Super Hybrid large SUV set to arrive in mid-July, ahead of the Tiggo 4 Hybrid.
Full local specification details are expected to be announced ahead of the Tiggo 4 Hybrid's late-July arrival in Australia.
MORE: Everything Chery Tiggo 4
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
The 2025 Chery Tiggo 4 Hybrid small SUV is scheduled to arrive late next month, and the two-grade lineup has today been priced from $29,990 drive-away.
That makes Australia's cheapest SUV nameplate also the most affordable hybrid on sale in Australia. The Tiggo 4 Hybrid undercuts the cheapest Toyota Yaris Hybrid hatch ($28,990 before on-road costs) and GWM Haval Jolion HEV small SUV ($32,990 drive-away).
Two variants will be available in Australia from July, including the base Urban ($29,990 D/A) and the flagship Ultimate ($34,990 D/A) – representing a $6000 premium for the electrified drivetrain.
Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now.
Unlike the recently announced Chery Tiggo 7 Super Hybrid and Chery Tiggo 8 Super Hybrid, the Tiggo 4 Hybrid is not a plug-in hybrid (PHEV) but a series-parallel hybrid like the Yaris Cross Hybrid and Jolion HEV.
Both Tiggo 4 Hybrid model grades will use a 71kW/118Nm 1.5-litre petrol engine teamed with an electric motor for combined outputs of 150kW/310Nm driving the front wheels.
With a 1.83kWh battery and combined fuel consumption of 5.4L/100km – compared to 7.3L/100km for the petrol-only version – the Tiggo 4 Hybrid has a claimed driving range of 1000km per tank.
It also quotes a 9.4-second 0-100km/h acceleration time, which is 1.2 seconds quicker than the petrol version.
Chery Australia hasn't announced further specifications for Australia, but the entry-level petrol Tiggo 4 Urban comes standard with 17-inch alloy wheels, keyless entry, dual 10.25-inch digital displays and Apple CarPlay/Android Auto smartphone connectivity.
In petrol guise, the Tiggo 4 Ultimate adds 18-inch alloys, heated front seats, a 360-degree surround camera and power sunroof.
Standard driver assist tech for the petrol Tiggo 4 includes autonomous emergency braking (AEB), adaptive cruise control, blind-spot monitoring and rear cross-traffic assist for both model grades.
The Tiggo 4 is currently Chery Australia's best-selling vehicle – making up more than half of its nearly 12,000 sales to the end of May this year – and the nation's fourth-best selling small SUV behind the Hyundai Kona, MG ZS, and the Jolion.
While the Kona is priced from $32,500 before on-roads, the cheapest Kona Hybrid starts at $36,500. Meantime, the MG ZS starts at $26,990 drive-away but the cheapest hybrid variant starts at $33,990 drive-away, and the Haval Jolion starts at $26,990 drive-away but the most affordable hybrid version costs $32,990 drive-away.
The Chery Tiggo 4 Hybrid is now the third hybrid SUV confirmed by the company to arrive next month, with the plug-in Chery Tiggo 7 Super Hybrid mid-size SUV and seven-seat Chery Tiggo 8 Super Hybrid large SUV set to arrive in mid-July, ahead of the Tiggo 4 Hybrid.
Full local specification details are expected to be announced ahead of the Tiggo 4 Hybrid's late-July arrival in Australia.
MORE: Everything Chery Tiggo 4
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
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The Volkswagen Tayron, a larger sibling to the new-generation Tiguan mid-size SUV that's available with a third row of seating, will start at $48,290 before on-road costs when it arrives here in September. That price is for the 110TSI Life, which costs $4300 more than the entry-level 110TSI Life version of the Tiguan Allspace it will replace. The front-wheel drive 110TSI Life is powered by a turbocharged 1.4-litre four-cylinder petrol engine producing 110kW of power and 250Nm of torque. CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal. While it's significantly more expensive than the equivalent Tiguan Allspace, the entry-level Tayron upgrades from an 8.0-inch infotainment touchscreen to a larger 12.9-inch unit, while its transmission gets another gear, and there are additional features like a surround-view camera fitted as standard. Compared to the entry-level Tiguan 110TSI Life, the Tayron is $3300 more expensive. 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The 110TSI Life comes standard with the following equipment: The 150TSI Life adds: The 150TSI Elegance adds: The 195TSI R-Line adds: Optional on the 150TSI Elegance and 195TSI R-Line is: • Panoramic roof Optional on the 150TSI Elegance is: Optional on the 195TSI R-Line is: Content originally sourced from: The Volkswagen Tayron, a larger sibling to the new-generation Tiguan mid-size SUV that's available with a third row of seating, will start at $48,290 before on-road costs when it arrives here in September. That price is for the 110TSI Life, which costs $4300 more than the entry-level 110TSI Life version of the Tiguan Allspace it will replace. The front-wheel drive 110TSI Life is powered by a turbocharged 1.4-litre four-cylinder petrol engine producing 110kW of power and 250Nm of torque. CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal. While it's significantly more expensive than the equivalent Tiguan Allspace, the entry-level Tayron upgrades from an 8.0-inch infotainment touchscreen to a larger 12.9-inch unit, while its transmission gets another gear, and there are additional features like a surround-view camera fitted as standard. Compared to the entry-level Tiguan 110TSI Life, the Tayron is $3300 more expensive. Stepping up to the 150TSI variants – the $53,990 plus on-roads Life, and $59,490 plus on-roads Elegance – gets you all-wheel drive and a more powerful 150kW 2.0-litre turbo four. Unusually, like the Tiguan, the 150TSI Life is a five-seater, while all other Tayrons feature seven seats. Topping the range is the all-wheel drive 195TSI R-Line at $73,490 before on-road costs, or $3000 more than the Tiguan 195TSI R-Line. It also comes with 2.0-litre turbo four, but this time with outputs of 195kW and 400Nm. All Tayrons come standard with a seven-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission. While the base engine has the same outputs as in the outgoing Tiguan Allspace, the other engines boast more power. The 150TSI produces 18kW more power than the old Tiguan Allspace 132TSI, while the 190TSI produces 28kW and 50Nm more than the old 162TSI. The Tayron is based on the German automaker's MQB Evo platform and measures 4792mm – 64mm longer than the Tiguan Allspace it replaces – with luggage space expanding by 115 litres to 345L (measured to the top of the rear backrests). This expands to 850L in seven-seat versions with the rear seat folded, and an even larger 885L in the five-seat 150TSI Life. Six exterior paint colours will be offered from launch: Pure White, Oyster Silver Metallic, Dolphin Grey Metallic, Night Shade Blue Metallic, Grenadilla Black Metallic, and Ultra Violet Premium are the features Volkswagen Australia has detailed so far for the new Tayron range. The 110TSI Life comes standard with the following equipment: The 150TSI Life adds: The 150TSI Elegance adds: The 195TSI R-Line adds: Optional on the 150TSI Elegance and 195TSI R-Line is: • Panoramic roof Optional on the 150TSI Elegance is: Optional on the 195TSI R-Line is: Content originally sourced from: The Volkswagen Tayron, a larger sibling to the new-generation Tiguan mid-size SUV that's available with a third row of seating, will start at $48,290 before on-road costs when it arrives here in September. That price is for the 110TSI Life, which costs $4300 more than the entry-level 110TSI Life version of the Tiguan Allspace it will replace. The front-wheel drive 110TSI Life is powered by a turbocharged 1.4-litre four-cylinder petrol engine producing 110kW of power and 250Nm of torque. CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal. While it's significantly more expensive than the equivalent Tiguan Allspace, the entry-level Tayron upgrades from an 8.0-inch infotainment touchscreen to a larger 12.9-inch unit, while its transmission gets another gear, and there are additional features like a surround-view camera fitted as standard. Compared to the entry-level Tiguan 110TSI Life, the Tayron is $3300 more expensive. Stepping up to the 150TSI variants – the $53,990 plus on-roads Life, and $59,490 plus on-roads Elegance – gets you all-wheel drive and a more powerful 150kW 2.0-litre turbo four. Unusually, like the Tiguan, the 150TSI Life is a five-seater, while all other Tayrons feature seven seats. Topping the range is the all-wheel drive 195TSI R-Line at $73,490 before on-road costs, or $3000 more than the Tiguan 195TSI R-Line. It also comes with 2.0-litre turbo four, but this time with outputs of 195kW and 400Nm. All Tayrons come standard with a seven-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission. While the base engine has the same outputs as in the outgoing Tiguan Allspace, the other engines boast more power. The 150TSI produces 18kW more power than the old Tiguan Allspace 132TSI, while the 190TSI produces 28kW and 50Nm more than the old 162TSI. The Tayron is based on the German automaker's MQB Evo platform and measures 4792mm – 64mm longer than the Tiguan Allspace it replaces – with luggage space expanding by 115 litres to 345L (measured to the top of the rear backrests). This expands to 850L in seven-seat versions with the rear seat folded, and an even larger 885L in the five-seat 150TSI Life. Six exterior paint colours will be offered from launch: Pure White, Oyster Silver Metallic, Dolphin Grey Metallic, Night Shade Blue Metallic, Grenadilla Black Metallic, and Ultra Violet Premium are the features Volkswagen Australia has detailed so far for the new Tayron range. The 110TSI Life comes standard with the following equipment: The 150TSI Life adds: The 150TSI Elegance adds: The 195TSI R-Line adds: Optional on the 150TSI Elegance and 195TSI R-Line is: • Panoramic roof Optional on the 150TSI Elegance is: Optional on the 195TSI R-Line is: Content originally sourced from: The Volkswagen Tayron, a larger sibling to the new-generation Tiguan mid-size SUV that's available with a third row of seating, will start at $48,290 before on-road costs when it arrives here in September. That price is for the 110TSI Life, which costs $4300 more than the entry-level 110TSI Life version of the Tiguan Allspace it will replace. The front-wheel drive 110TSI Life is powered by a turbocharged 1.4-litre four-cylinder petrol engine producing 110kW of power and 250Nm of torque. CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal. While it's significantly more expensive than the equivalent Tiguan Allspace, the entry-level Tayron upgrades from an 8.0-inch infotainment touchscreen to a larger 12.9-inch unit, while its transmission gets another gear, and there are additional features like a surround-view camera fitted as standard. Compared to the entry-level Tiguan 110TSI Life, the Tayron is $3300 more expensive. Stepping up to the 150TSI variants – the $53,990 plus on-roads Life, and $59,490 plus on-roads Elegance – gets you all-wheel drive and a more powerful 150kW 2.0-litre turbo four. Unusually, like the Tiguan, the 150TSI Life is a five-seater, while all other Tayrons feature seven seats. Topping the range is the all-wheel drive 195TSI R-Line at $73,490 before on-road costs, or $3000 more than the Tiguan 195TSI R-Line. It also comes with 2.0-litre turbo four, but this time with outputs of 195kW and 400Nm. All Tayrons come standard with a seven-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission. While the base engine has the same outputs as in the outgoing Tiguan Allspace, the other engines boast more power. The 150TSI produces 18kW more power than the old Tiguan Allspace 132TSI, while the 190TSI produces 28kW and 50Nm more than the old 162TSI. The Tayron is based on the German automaker's MQB Evo platform and measures 4792mm – 64mm longer than the Tiguan Allspace it replaces – with luggage space expanding by 115 litres to 345L (measured to the top of the rear backrests). This expands to 850L in seven-seat versions with the rear seat folded, and an even larger 885L in the five-seat 150TSI Life. Six exterior paint colours will be offered from launch: Pure White, Oyster Silver Metallic, Dolphin Grey Metallic, Night Shade Blue Metallic, Grenadilla Black Metallic, and Ultra Violet Premium are the features Volkswagen Australia has detailed so far for the new Tayron range. The 110TSI Life comes standard with the following equipment: The 150TSI Life adds: The 150TSI Elegance adds: The 195TSI R-Line adds: Optional on the 150TSI Elegance and 195TSI R-Line is: • Panoramic roof Optional on the 150TSI Elegance is: Optional on the 195TSI R-Line is: Content originally sourced from: