If you’ve spent any time on the roads lately, you’ve noticed the BYD badge popping up more and more. But while models like the Sealion 5 and Shark 6 bakkie are aimed at the heart of the market, BYD has a more ambitious target in its sights: the premium SUV segment!
Enter Denza. Originally a 50:50 joint venture between BYD and Mercedes-Benz, Denza is now 100% owned by the Chinese tech giant and is officially confirmed to launch in South Africa in early 2026. Here is everything you need to know about the brand that wants to be your next luxury SUV or grand tourer.
The Lineup
Denza isn't playing it safe. Their South African invasion is spearheaded by two "adventure luxury" SUVs designed to take on the Toyota Land Cruiser Prado and the Ford Everest.
Denza B5
The B5 is a luxury SUV on a ladder-frame chassis. It shares its DNA with the BYD Shark bakkie but turns the dial up to eleven.
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Powertrain: 1.5-litre turbo petrol plug-in hybrid (PHEV).
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Performance: 505kW and 760Nm, enough for this 3-ton SUV to get from 0–100 km/h in a claimed 4.8 seconds.
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Off-Road: It features DiSus-P hydraulic suspension, allowing you to raise the ground clearance to 310mm and wade through 790mm of water.
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Estimated SA Price: Expect it to land around the R1 200 000 to R1 400 000 mark.
Denza B8
If the B5 is a Prado rival, the B8 is aimed at the Land Cruiser 300. It’s a massive 5.2-metre-long SUV with three electric motors and a 2.0-litre turbo engine acting as a generator. With 550kW and a combined range of over 1 200km, it sounds rather appealing.
The Z9 GT
This is Denza's "halo" car—a stunning Shooting Brake (think Porsche Panamera Sport Turismo) with nearly 710kW. It features world-first tech "crab-walking" (the rear wheels turn up to 20 degrees) and three electric motors that can rotate the car on its own axis.
Can it compete with BMW, Audi, and Mercedes?
The "Big Three" have spent decades building brand prestige in SA, but Denza has three specific weapons that should have these brands looking over their figurative shoulders:
The tech gap: Inside a Denza, you’ll find up to three high-definition screens on the dashboard (including one specifically for the passenger), dual refrigerators, and Nappa leather seats with "zero-gravity" reclining modes. Compared to the often-pricey options lists of German rivals, Denza comes "full house" as standard, adopting a strategy seen in brands like Lexus. Denza was originally developed as a 50-50 joint venture between BYD and Daimler AG (Mercedes-Benz's parent company), starting in 2010. However, Mercedes-Benz fully exited the partnership by late 2024, making Denza wholly owned by BYD.
Less range anxiety: Unlike pure EVs, Denza’s PHEV (Dual Mode) tech means South Africans will be more interested in the brand.
The "Flash" network: BYD is investing in 300 fast-charging stations across South Africa by the end of 2026. These "Flash" chargers can reportedly add 400km of range in just 5 minutes for their EV models—faster than you can grab a Wimpy coffee. This all remains to be seen, though.
Verdict
The biggest challenge for Denza won't be the product—it will be the badge. South African luxury buyers are notoriously brand-loyal. However, if Denza can price the B5 and B8 competitively against the new Prado and Defender, while offering performance and a tech-heavy interior, they might just convince the "Sandton set" to make the switch.
Full article HERE
(source: AutoTrader)