Xiaomi’s Bold SUV Move to Outsell Tesla and Break Records
What happens when a tech giant admits its electric SUV isn’t cutting it against Tesla? Xiaomi’s CEO Lei Jun didn’t just admit defeat—he fired back with a game changer. The new Xiaomi YU7 Standard Edition slashes the price and cranks up the range. This is a full-on challenge to Tesla’s Model Y. But Xiaomi didn’t stop there. They also unleashed a 1,003-horsepower SUV that just smashed the Nürburgring SUV lap record. Two SUVs. Two strategies. One mission: dominate the EV market in China and beyond.
Price Slashed, Range Extended: The YU7 Standard Edition
The original YU7 landed with a price barely undercutting Tesla’s Model Y by about $1,450. That gap wasn’t enough. Sales cooled after the initial hype. Lei Jun acknowledged that the previous price was “not competitive enough.” So Xiaomi went back to the drawing board and resurfaced a new entry-level YU7 Standard Edition at just $34,300. That’s roughly $4,350 cheaper than the Tesla Model Y in China.
Price isn’t the only weapon. Xiaomi’s new YU7 packs a 73 kWh lithium iron phosphate battery offering 643 kilometers (about 399 miles) on the CLTC cycle. That’s 50 kilometers more than Tesla’s base Model Y. All with a smaller battery and lighter curb weight of 2,200 kg. The powertrain is a single rear motor pushing out 235 kW (315 horsepower), good enough for 0 to 100 km/h in 5.9 seconds.
The tech inside rivals pricier models. Xiaomi kept air suspension, LiDAR, and a 700 TOPS NVIDIA DRIVE AGX Thor chip for advanced assisted driving. These features don’t come standard on Tesla’s Model Y at any price. Charging speeds impress too. The YU7’s 752-volt platform can recharge from 10 to 80 percent in 20 minutes, restoring over 400 kilometers of range in just 15 minutes.
Xiaomi’s strategy is clear: match Tesla feature for feature but offer it cheaper and with more range. Lei Jun summed it up: “We learned from Tesla. Now, Standard versus Standard, Long-Range versus Long-Range, we have absolute competitiveness.” This moves Xiaomi from competing on specs alone to leading on value.
Track Beast Unleashed: The YU7 GT Sets New Standards
If the Standard Edition is Xiaomi’s volume play, the YU7 GT is its loud roar on the performance stage. Starting at about $54,000, this monster packs a mind-blowing 1,003 horsepower from a dual-motor setup. It rockets from 0 to 100 km/h in just 2.92 seconds and hits a top speed of 300 km/h.
The GT isn’t just fast on paper. It crushed the Nürburgring Nordschleife SUV lap record with a time of 7 minutes 22.755 seconds, beating the previous record by 14 seconds. That’s a huge leap in SUV performance and a statement to the world: Xiaomi can compete with luxury European brands on the toughest circuits.
Built on an 897-volt ultra-high-voltage platform, the YU7 GT uses a 101.7 kWh battery with lightning-fast 12-minute 10-to-80 percent charging. Its chassis development was led by Xiaomi’s European R&D center in Munich, staffed by experts from BMW and Porsche. The car boasts carbon-ceramic brakes, dual-chamber air suspension, electronic limited-slip differential, and a cabin loaded with luxury touches like Alcantara upholstery, massage seats, and a 25-speaker Dolby Atmos sound system.
This is no mere track toy. Xiaomi calls it a “Gran Turismo” SUV—comfortable enough for daily driving and long road trips but ferocious on the track. The GT sets a new bar for what Chinese automakers can deliver.
A New Era for Xiaomi Auto: Ambition Meets Execution
Xiaomi’s auto division is no longer a side project. They’ve shipped over 600,000 EVs in less than two years. The YU7 alone sold 232,000 units in 10 months. But demand slowed after clearing the initial backlog. The new Standard Edition aims to reignite volume by offering a compelling price and feature set.
Lei Jun also revealed plans for massive R&D investments—over $29 billion in the next five years—focused on chips, operating systems, and AI. They recruited top talent, including a former Tesla Shanghai factory VP, to tighten production and scale deliveries. Despite supply chain hurdles and rising component costs, Xiaomi is pushing hard to absorb costs internally without passing them on.
The dual-launch strategy—an affordable volume model and a flagship performance SUV—is a textbook play to capture market share and prestige simultaneously. The YU7 Standard challenges Tesla head-on in the mainstream market. The YU7 GT raises Xiaomi’s profile globally as a serious performance brand.
With ongoing innovation, aggressive pricing, and record-breaking performance, Xiaomi is rewriting the EV playbook. Will Tesla feel the heat? Absolutely. The race for China’s—and the world’s—electric SUV crown just got a lot more interesting.
Based on
- Xiaomi’s CEO admitted his SUV wasn’t cheap enough to beat Tesla. Then he launched one that is. — thenextweb.com
- Xiaomi YU7 Standard Edition Pricing Slashed by 6,000 Yuan; Lei Jun Recounts ‘8 Losses, 2 Wins’ Before Renewing Model Y Challenge — BigGo Finance — finance.biggo.com
- Xiaomi targets Tesla domination with new YU7 models – ArenaEV — arenaev.com
- Xiaomi Launches New, Cheaper YU7 Aims to ‘Once Again Challenge’ Tesla Model Y | EV — eletric-vehicles.com
- Xiaomi Launches $32,400 YU7 Standard to Beat Tesla, and a 1,003-HP GT That Just Broke the Nürburgring SUV Record — BigGo Finance — finance.biggo.com
- Xiaomi launches cheaper YU7 Standard Edition to challenge Tesla Model Y in China — driveteslacanada.ca















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