Currently reading: Report: Nio to launch in UK in early 2025 with new Onvo L60

Lack of import tariffs means UK will be first European market to get Chinese firm's new affordable EV brand

Nio will reportedly bring its new affordable EV brand Onvo to Europe next year, starting with the launch of the L60 coupé-SUV in the UK. 

As reported by Automotive News Europe, Nio's product planning boss Eric Yu explained that Onvo would come to the UK first because, unlike the EU, it doesn't put import tariffs on Chinese-built EVs - which will have been a crucial motivator, given Onvo's value-focused billing.

Nio's EVs are currently subject to a 31% import tariff in the EU, up from 10% in 2023.

Similarly impacted car makers, including BYD, Chery, MiniPolestar and Volvo are moving production of some EVs from China to Europe to circumvent the tariffs, but Nio hasn't announced any plans to build cars in Europe, having passed on the chance to take over Audi's EV factory in Belgium.

Nio started selling EVs in Europe in 2021 but has yet to make its way to the UK, so the expansion of Onvo will mark the company's first foray into the market.

Per Automotive News Europe, Yu said that Onvo exports to Europe would begin when production reaches 30,000 units per month, which is expected to be around March 2025.

It isn't yet clear how the cars will be sold in the UK; Autocar has approached Nio for comment.

News of Onvo's expansion outside China comes just days before Nio is due to unwrap the first model from its second new EV Brand, Firefly, which is conceived as a maker of premium small EVs with a global focus.

It has yet to confirm European timelines for Firefly, though. 

Nio's existing European line-up is oriented towards the premium end of the market, and so the EU's import tariffs have a less dramatic impact on profitability, but it's likely that the firm will want to build its more value-focused Onvo and Firefly models locally, in order to keep the prices down. 

The L60, Onvo's first model, is a Tesla Model Y-rivalling crossover that majors on practicality and efficiency. It's sold in China at the equivalent of £24,000 but is likely to be priced nearer to its American rival at just north of £40,000 in Europe. 

The L60 showcases how Onvo will target family buyers in the lower premium segment, with an overt focus on interior space, safety and utility.

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It claims a significant advantage over the Model Y in being equipped with 900V electrical architecture for ultra-rapid charging and will be equipped with a choice of three BYD-supplied battery packs offering 344, 454 or 620 miles of range (according to China's generous CLTC test cycle).

The L60 is also more efficient than the Model Y, Nio has claimed, with a consumption rating of 5.1mpkWh - a figure that owes much to its slippery silhouette.

It's said to be the most aerodynamically efficient SUV on the market, with a drag coefficient of just 0.23Cd. 

Full dimensions remain under wraps, but Nio said the short overhangs maximise space in the cabin and "with ingenious storage design, every occupant can bring along their own luggage". 

The L60 is equipped with the same advanced driver assistance functions as Nio's own EVs.

It's also compatible with the firm's trademark battery-swap stations, meaning it can gain a fully charged battery in just three minutes at more than 1000 sites across China - as well as being able to top up conventionally at 25,000 of Nio's own public chargers.

With no battery swap infrastructure yet installed in the UK, it's unlikely that the L60 will be offered here with that functionality, at least initially. 

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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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Comments
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tuga 19 December 2024
Wow, you guys get to have another generic EV SUV/CUV thing before us here in the continent? Lucky, lucky you.
scrap 19 December 2024

Madness. The UK seems determined to destroy what remains of its manufacturing base.

Chinese cars will kill us, except for the niche luxury market (for now).

xxxx 19 December 2024

31% tarrif in EU, a case of if you can't beat em, up the tarrif at the expense of the consumer.

scrap 19 December 2024

The UK is fatally out of step with the EU on automotive. It's suicidal. 

Andrew1 19 December 2024

Yeah, maybe they should subsidise producers, instead. If you can't beat them, copy them.

xxxx 19 December 2024

They do, just look at the blank cheque Germany gave Tesla.

Andrew1 19 December 2024

Much like the UK gives to Stellantis and Tata. Only that Tesla is successful.

xxxx 19 December 2024

You got it, at last. They all do including the Chinese.

Slating Stellantis too, you really have come round.