BYD Dolphin Review 2024

BYD Dolphin At A Glance

4/5
Honest John Overall Rating
The BYD Dolphin is cheap by electric car standards, but doesn’t feel it. It’s thoroughly well resolved, combining laudable interior comfort, space and build quality with impressive performance and a respectable range.

+Well built, comfortable, spacious and affordable. Easy to drive and live with.

-Touchscreen menus a maze. Boot is smallish. Intrusive lane keeping assist tech.

BYD may very well be the biggest company you’ve never heard of. BYD stands for Build Your Dreams – a Chinese giant that’s the world’s biggest electric car brand. And the BYD Dolphin is its entry-level electric car that costs £25,490 - less than an MG4. Question is, is it any good? We'll reveal all on our BYD Dolphin review.

BYD makes half the world’s supply of Apple iPads and sells so much automotive tech to other manufacturers (EV batteries being top of that list) that it is reluctant to discuss rivals for this new compact electric hatchback, the BYD Dolphin, for fear of upsetting its customers.

However, whatever rival you do choose will be more expensive than this, BYD’s second electric car (the first being the BYD Atto 3 small SUV). The BYD Dolphin's keen pricing combined with generous all-electric range and surprisingly high build quality make it a pretty compelling proposition and an interesting alternative to the cheapest electric cars on the market.

With four trim levels on offer – Active, Boost, Comfort and Design – the BYD Dolphin is available with a choice of two batteries featuring the company’s ‘Blade’ structure: Active and Boost models have a 44.9 kWh battery with a 95PS motor for the former and a 176PS motor for the latter, while estimated WLTP ranges are 221 and 192 miles respectively.

Posher Comfort and Design variants boast a gutsier 60.4kWh battery, a 204PS electric motor and an estimated WLTP range of 265 miles.

This two power strategy divides the BYD Dolphin’s rivals into two camps. The lesser battery is pitched against the likes of the Vauxhall Corsa Electric and the Peugeot e-208. The larger battery, meanwhile, takes on the MG4 and even the Volkswagen ID.3.

Pricing from between £25,490 and £30,990 feels far more reasonable than that of most electric offerings, undercutting even the MG4.

Because the company is still building up a head of steam over here, with 27 sales locations in the UK this year and 100 promised by 2024, the BYD Dolphin is currently only available in Comfort and Design trim levels with the larger battery.

In terms of design, the BYD Dolphin is reasonably attractive. It demonstrates the same mildly sharp-suited generic looks as most of the electric compact hatches currently available, although the words ‘Build Your Dreams’ are writ large in chrome across the tailgate.

Those who grew up with the more familiar GLX or GTi badging may find themselves surreptitiously reaching for a small chisel.

On board, however, the BYD Dolphin immediately stands apart from the throng with an enthusiastically different interior. The cockpit boasts, among other touches, ergonomically inept door handles styled on a dolphin’s flipper, a rotatable 12.8-inch touchscreen, plenty of conventional switchgear, vegan leather upholstery and stacks of room in the rear seats.

The driving experience is classic electric hatchback, with plenty of oomph off the line from the 60.4kWh/204PS combo, and a focus on ride comfort rather than the last word in handling prowess.

That’s not to say the BYD Dolphin isn’t respectably agile for a car in this class. It’s merely that there’s little reward for pushing too hard. The electric powertrain makes itself heard at low speeds, but A-pillar and door mirror wind noise allied to tyre roar take over when cruising.

Our experience of the BYD Dolphin suggests that the quoted WLTP range of 265 miles isn’t too over-optimistic, and the presence of a heat pump fitted as standard across the line-up will help avoid that figure falling through the floor in winter months. All versions also get Vehicle-to-Load (VtoL) technology that allows you to run electrical devices from the car on posh picnics.

The 60.4kWh battery charges at a maximum of 88kW from an appropriately powerful DC source – perceptibly slower than most rivals. BYD claims 30-80% charging in 29 minutes, which sounds great, until you realise that competitors claim similar times starting from only 10%. But 11kW AC charging is standard, so with a three-phase supply at home you’ll be fine.

In the absence of the lesser battery-equipped versions at the moment, the BYD Dolphin Comfort is likely to take the lion’s share of sales. So £29,490 buys you a pretty impressive compact electric SUV with a respectable range, decent infotainment, creditable build quality and a price verging on affordability.