BYD commits to 250,000 km battery warranty to further shake up the European EV market
Chinese automaker BYD announced a new policy for European customers today, effectively daring the competition to match its confidence. The company extended its electric car battery warranty, setting a new benchmark that puts a lot of pressure on established rivals like Volkswagen.
The new coverage for BYD's lineup of New Energy Vehicles is straightforward and aggressive: eight years or 155,300 miles, whichever milestone an owner reaches first. Before this announcement, the industry standard for an EV battery warranty sat comfortably around eight years and 99,400 miles. BYD's massive bump in mileage coverage targets the highest-usage drivers on the continent, including taxi services, ride-share fleets, and anyone who piles on the kilometers during their daily commute.
Confidence in our Blade Battery just got an upgrade 🔋
— BYD Europe (@BYD_Europe) December 15, 2025
We’re extending its warranty to 8 years or 250,000 km across all BYD plug-in models, past and present.
Already own a BYD? This upgrade is automatic and retroactive.#BYD #BuildYourDreams #BladeBatteryWarranty pic.twitter.com/9bmEGR8nyI
The difference in warranty coverage is embarrassing for the competition. Volkswagen's popular ID. series and the base rear-wheel-drive versions of the Tesla Model 3 and Model Y still offer the standard 8-year/160,000-km promise. Hyundai and Kia stick to the same traditional figures.
Even when looking at the more expensive Tesla Long Range and Performance models, which get a slightly better 192,000-km warranty, BYD still wins. Their new policy offers nearly 60% more protection than the industry standard and an additional 36,040 miles of coverage over Tesla's best offer.
Many European and American electric cars traditionally rely on Nickel Cobalt Manganese (NCM) battery cells for long range, but the Blade Battery uses a different recipe called Lithium Iron Phosphate, or LFP. This chemistry has an important advantage: it handles a higher number of charge and discharge cycles better than NCM. This is why BYD can confidently increase the warranty mileage, and in fact, the company often claims its technology can sustain over 3,000 charge cycles while maintaining most of its power.
To understand the confidence this LFP technology provides, consider the math. An electric car with a starting range of 249 miles that goes through 3,000 charge cycles could theoretically deliver up to 1 million kilometers of total service life before the battery degrades to a set point, such as 70% of its original capacity. The 250,000-km warranty, while aggressive for the market, is quite a conservative promise for the chemistry itself.
The aggressive warranty extension is part of a larger, full-throttle expansion effort across Europe for the Chinese electric car giant. BYD has just launched the new Sealion 7 SUV and is pushing updated versions of its popular Seal sedan and the family-friendly Atto 3 crossover. Offering a best-in-class warranty is the perfect trust-builder, encouraging potential buyers to take a chance on a newer brand.
For customers considering a shift to electric cars, this peace of mind can often be the deciding factor. BYD is positioning its EVs not just on price or features, but on reliability and long-term value, directly challenging the notion that its technology is a step behind that of the legacy automakers. The pressure is now on other automakers to raise their game, or risk being left behind by a company that's relatively new to the European market.
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