Ten years ago, 'Chinese luxury car' was an oxymoron. In 2026 it's a category Geely Holding Group has quietly become very good at — driven mostly by Zeekr, which operates like a European brand with a Chinese cost base.
Ten years ago, "Chinese luxury car" was an oxymoron. The premium segment was a closed shop — Mercedes, BMW, Audi, Lexus, with Jaguar and Cadillac holding their corners. China sold cheap cars and they sold a lot of them, but premium was not part of the story.
That has changed completely. Chinese automakers have spent the last decade building what is essentially a parallel premium tier — and in some dimensions (software, interior tech, ride refinement at specific price points) have pulled ahead of the Germans. For export dealers targeting premium buyers, this is now a legitimate category. Here's what's in it and who it's for.
The Chinese premium EV segment divides roughly into three groups:
European-design premium: Cars designed in European studios, engineered with European talent, built in China, priced with Chinese cost advantages. This is the Zeekr playbook (Gothenburg design studio), the Polestar playbook (Swedish brand inside Geely Holding), the Lotus playbook (British brand inside Geely Holding). To a European or GCC buyer, these cars look and feel like European premium — because in most meaningful ways, they are.
Chinese-domestic premium: Brands like NIO, Yangwang (BYD), and Denza (BYD) that were designed primarily for Chinese premium buyers. Chinese-domestic premium has its own aesthetic and priorities — more screens, more software features, more ride comfort at low speeds, less focus on driver engagement. These export less cleanly because the product was tuned for a different buyer.
Emerging luxury sub-brands: Voyah (Dongfeng), AITO (Huawei + Seres), IM Motors (SAIC + Alibaba). Still finding their positioning. Some will make it, some won't.
Zeekr's flagship and still its best-known model in export markets. Shooting-brake body style, up to 810 km CLTC, 2.83s 0-100 km/h AWD, 900V architecture on the LR model. In Europe it sells alongside the Audi A7 Sportback and BMW i5 Touring; in the GCC it's positioned against the Mercedes CLS and BMW 6-series.
Our pick for the executive-sedan slot in a premium dealer's lineup. 905 km CLTC at the top of the range, 2.84s 0-100 km/h AWD, 800V platform. Interior polish is on par with a Mercedes EQE at a materially lower price point. Long-wheelbase markets (Middle East, parts of Asia) take particularly well to this car.
The smallest Zeekr. 530 km CLTC, factory-built RHD. Where Zeekr really differentiates is in packaging — this car has significantly more interior room than its footprint implies. For urban premium buyers in RHD markets (UK, Australia, Malaysia), it's a legitimate alternative to a BMW X1 or Mercedes GLA.
For markets where chauffeur-driven premium transport is a category (GCC, Hong Kong, parts of Southeast Asia), the 9X sits against the Toyota Alphard and Mercedes V-Class. We'll quote this on request.
Sold as a Swedish brand globally, which in many markets completely bypasses "Chinese car" skepticism. Premium pricing, strong Volvo engineering heritage, good export distribution through Geely Holding's infrastructure.
Premium-tier Chinese EVs sell well to three specific buyer profiles:
Where premium Chinese EVs don't sell well: conservative luxury buyers who want a Mercedes because it's a Mercedes. That buyer is not available to you in 2026. Don't chase them.
Three-year residuals for Chinese premium EVs are still establishing in most export markets, which creates both risk and opportunity. In markets where Zeekr has a few years of presence (UK, EU, UAE), residuals are firming up at 45-55% at 3 years, which compares respectably to European premium EVs in the same period. In newer markets without established residual data, buyers price in additional risk, which can depress the initial sell price.
If you're opening a Chinese premium EV channel in a market without track record, expect a 12-24 month positioning phase before the secondary market stabilises. Price the first shipments with that in mind.
Zeekr is a genuine premium brand within the global automotive industry — its vehicles are designed in Gothenburg, built to the quality standards of a Geely Holding Group premium sub-brand, and positioned to compete with European premium EVs. The brand skepticism some buyers initially bring is usually not reflected in the product experience once they drive it.
Residual data in most emerging markets is still developing. In markets where Zeekr has 2-3 years of presence, residuals are firming up at 45-55% at 3 years — which is respectable versus European premium EVs. In newer markets, expect a 12-24 month positioning phase.
Typically 30-45% lower for similar configuration, depending on the destination market. The gap is partly pricing strategy and partly structural — Zeekr operates with a materially lower cost base than European legacy premium brands.
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