• Home
  • New Cars
  • Jaecoo 7: Why is the ‘entirely flavourless’ SUV a smash hit?
Image

Jaecoo 7: Why is the ‘entirely flavourless’ SUV a smash hit?


The news that the Jaecoo 7 was the UK’s best-selling car in March wasn’t really a surprise (it has been in the top 10 for much of the last year), but it’s still a significant milestone that deserves some exploration.

That the Chinese SUV’s rise to the top of the UK sales chart already felt inevitable is notable in itself: it’s a genuine cultural phenomenon, an expectation-bending sales smash from a brand that has scarcely been in the UK for a year. It will sit alongside machines such as the Nissan Qashqai and Kia Sportage in transitioning from big selling cars into basically household names.

That’s despite the fact that, objectively, the 7 isn’t a brilliant car: we gave it 2.5 stars when we gave it a full road test, noting that while “a complete and competent car” for those on a budget, it was also “irksome, distracting and poorly calibrated” and “entirely flavourless” to drive. We couldn’t really find much to separate it from a raft of other identikit Chinese SUVs that have been launched into the UK in the last year from brands such as BYD, Omoda, Changan, Leapmotor and more.

Those reservations clearly haven’t put off many buyers, and clearly there is some appeal to a car that offers the kit of premium rivals for significantly less money. There are some compelling deals to be found and a ready supply of stock.

Which brings us to the 7’s killer sell: it has become known as the ‘Temu Range Rover’. Because, yes, if you squint a bit it looks like a premium £70k SUV but is half the price. And, as a quick search on social media will tell you, that has won over plenty of buyers. And while it might not be Jaecoo’s official marketing slogan, it’s a brilliant one: like when Volkswagen first bought Skoda, for many there’s something compelling cool about thinking you’ve snagged an absolute bargain because you’re not brand-conscious.

If anything, the concern for Jaecoo (and its sister brand Omoda) is that this one car has done so well that it has perhaps become a brand in its own right. Jaecoo has the smaller 5 and larger 8 coming soon, but are 7 owners now invested enough in the brand to branch out?

It’s also important to note that the 7 isn’t the only Chinese car that UK buyers are warming to. In the first quarter of 2026, MG has a market share of 3.88%, with BYD not far behind. The Chinese brands are no longer coming: they’re here.

And that success, headlined by the 7, should serve as a warning to European manufacturers. Faced with this glut of Chinese imports, many of those firms are doubling down on the strength of their brands, believing that European consumers will value the companies, badges and models they know and love. But the sales data suggests consumers perhaps aren’t as loyal as they’re banking on – especially if they think they can bag a bargain.

[https://tds666ebook.in/]

Releated Posts

Tested: 2026 Mercedes-Benz GLB Electric – Full review, price & features

The GLB’s practicality comes as a welcome surprise. You don’t really expect an SUV of this size to…

ByByTDSNEWS999 Apr 10, 2026

Used Jaguar F-Pace 2016-2024 review

Would a Jaguar still feel like a Jaguar if you sat in it bent-legged and meerkat-like at the…

ByByTDSNEWS999 Apr 10, 2026

New Stellantis design boss vows “no clones” in effort to separate brands

Stellantis is working to more clearly differentiate its brands under new European design chief Gilles Vidal so they…

ByByTDSNEWS999 Apr 9, 2026

Forget a Corsa – I bought a 355bhp Audi S8 as my first car

Among the many surprises Cameron Peters has up his sleeve is that although his 2002-reg Audi S8 is…

ByByTDSNEWS999 Apr 9, 2026