Toyota has detailed its Chinese-market bZ5 crossover SUV ahead of its launch overseas.
The bZ4X is Toyota’s sole fully electric SUV offering here, but the bZ moniker (short for beyond zero) is home to an entire range of EVs in China that Toyota builds with its joint-venture partners.
The bZ5, a joint-venture with China’s FAW, joins the already-launched bZ3 sedan (a joint-venture with BYD and FAW), bZ3X mid-size SUV and bZ7 sedan (both joint-ventures with GAC).
The bZ5 shares similar styling points and interior features to the bZ4X, although it sources its 200kW electric motor from BYD and its 74kWh LFP battery from Fudi New Energy, which is claimed to grant it a range of up 550km on the CLTC protocol.
Measuring in at 4780mm long, 1866mm wide, and 1510mm tall, it is more like a lifted sedan in a similar vein to a vehicle like the Polestar 2, rather than the more traditional SUV shape of the bZ4X, which it is sold alongside overseas.
Inside the bZ5 scores a larger 15.6-inch central multimedia touchscreen to the one in the bZ4X, and, bizarrely, scores paddle-based light controllers, with buttons on the steering wheel for indicating, much like the new Tesla Model 3.
The bZ5 is priced between the equivalent of $28,000 and $35,000 for its two-variant front-wheel drive only range.
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The bZ4X will remain Toyota’s only purely electric vehicle in Australia for the time being, with an update on the way designed to address some factors which have given it a less competitive edge over newcomer Chinese rivals such as the Geely EX5, which already outranks it.
The brand has indicated in the past that it won’t seek to export its Chinese joint-venture electric vehicles, despite their seemingly appealing value proposition.
Toyota chairman, Akio Toyota has spoken out against EVs recently, saying they have too high a carbon price to manufacture compared to its range of popular hybrids. Despite this, it has been on an EV blitz in China, a market that is not traditionally as strong for the Japanese giant as it is elsewhere in the world. It is also a market where electric vehicles are now very much in the mainstream, particularly in the larger cities.
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In Europe, Toyota will also soon launch a fully electric version of its C-HR small SUV, although this has also not been locked in for an Australian arrival, as the brand takes a more market-based tactical approach to its electric vehicle roll-out.
This leaves the biggest news for the brand in Australia the new-generation RAV4 which is set to arrive later in 2025, and a production version of its monocoque ute EPU concept as part of a roll-out of six new electric vehicles to hit the market by next year.