Browse over 9,000 car reviews

GWM Steed Reviews

You'll find all our GWM Steed reviews right here. GWM Steed prices range from for the Steed 4x2 to for the Steed 4x2.

Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the 's features, design, practicality, fuel consumption, engine and transmission, safety, ownership and what it's like to drive.

The most recent reviews sit up the top of the page, but if you're looking for an older model year or shopping for a used car, scroll down to find GWM dating back as far as 2021.

Or, if you just want to read the latest news about the GWM Steed, you'll find it all here.

GWM Reviews and News

GWM Tank 300 2025 review: Diesel - Australian first drive
By Tim Nicholson · 25 Mar 2025
The GWM Tank 300 has been a huge hit thanks to genuine off-road ability and keen pricing. But a lack of a diesel engine kept some buyers away. Not anymore! The diesel version is on sale now, but is it the pick of the powertrains?
Read the article
All cars could be Chinese in Australia by 2040! The rise and rise of MG, BYD, GWM, Geely, LDV, Deepal, JAC, Chery and more | Opinion
By Laura Berry · 22 Mar 2025
The rapid and seemingly unstoppable expansion of Chinese carmakers is something to behold.But is it too far-fetched to think all cars will be Chinese within the next 20 years? Or is it naive not to see it as a strong possibility?For a long time I’ve thought the emergence of new Chinese cars in Australia and globally was the natural progression of the car industry. New brands morph from alternative fledgling brands to mature and established ones. We saw this with Japanese brands such as Toyota, Mazda, Mitsubishi and Nissan which gained popularity in the 1960s and ’70s before becoming established go-to brands in the 1980s and ’90s as they fought homegrown heroes Ford and Holden for space in Australia's driveways. And it stayed that way until the first decade of the 2000s ticked over.Holden and Ford’s ranges and sales shrank giving way to the Koreans who filled the gap with Hyundai and Kia which have climbed high into the top 10 thanks to an excellent range of SUVs and EVs.They’re now marching towards the only brands that stand in their way - Mitsubishi, Ford, Mazda and Toyota - which, by the way, have about three EVs between them.And given another five years Kia and Hyundai may have been able to topple Toyota from number one. But it might be too late for that. The presence of a large and fast-growing force is creating major uncertainty for the established brands in the Australian market - the rise and rise of Chinese brands. At the end of 2024 there were 12 Chinese brands operating in Australia and this year we’re expecting at least another seven to arrive. To put that in perspective we currently have a total of 50 car brands in Australia and nine are Japanese. By the end of 2025 the Chinese tally could easily be 20 brands or 30 per cent of Australia's brand make up.Several Chinese brands have been in Australia for years and have already done the hard yards. It took MG a couple of attempts to find a foothold but it was the seventh best-selling brand in 2024, while GWM came in at 10th. LDV is further down but still sold more than 16,000 vehicles here last year.The newer Chinese arrivals show huge promise with most of them offering affordable electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids when the established brands have only a handful among them, usually at higher prices.BYD, Zeekr, Leapmotor, Geely, Deepal, XPeng, Smart, JAC, Aion, Chery and Jaecoo will spend 2025 launching a multitude of new vehicles here. BYD will be one to watch having sold more cars here last year than Mercedes-Benz and it will likely enter the top 10 best sellers next year. Geely, which is the ‘Volkswagen of China’ in terms of its size and how many brands it owns, is another to watch.Chinese car manufacturers' speed of production, the development of new platforms and technology, the low cost of batteries, availability of electronics and the breakthroughs being made in charging systems, plus the sheer amount of money and Chinese government support behind them make competition almost impossible for many other brands.It’s almost certain that some established brands will bow out of Australia, unable to compete with Chinese brands. It’s also feasible that within the next decade more than half the Australian market could be made up of Chinese brands. And surely some Chinese brands won’t be able to cut it here and leave, too.Who could survive? Well, time has shown that even the mighty like Holden have fallen if they don’t make the cars people want to buy. The sheer brute force of Chinese brands being able to offer what people want quickly and at a low price, and at an always improving tech level could be too difficult for many other brands to fight off.In an extreme scenario this could lead to a 100 per cent Chinese brand market within 15 years. Sounds far fetched? Well they’re a third of the way there already.  
Read the article
Australia's best small cars
By Stephen Ottley · 19 Mar 2025
In 2011 there was a seismic shift in the Australian car market - the Holden Commodore was dethroned as this country’s favourite car by the Mazda3.
Read the article
GWM Cannon Alpha 2025 review: Ultra Hybrid - GVM test
By Mark Oastler · 18 Mar 2025
GWM won the race to launch Australia's first full-hybrid ute, but does it have what it takes to topple the traditional turbo-diesel?
Read the article
What is the safest car in Australia?
By Emily Agar · 18 Mar 2025
What is the safest car in Australia?
Read the article
This Chinese brand could outsell Nissan, Isuzu and even MG in 2025! How the GWM Haval Jolion and H6 SUVs and Cannon ute will help boost sales
By Tim Nicholson · 18 Mar 2025
Every new Chinese auto brand that launches in Australia has bold ambitions and even bolder sales targets. Some claim they want to be the top brand in Australia, others declare they will usurp much-loved brands in the top 10 sales charts in nothing flat.
Read the article
Updated family SUV revealed! 2025 GWM Haval H6 right-hand drive update revealed as brand prepares to battle MG HS, Mitsubishi Outlander and Kia Sportage family SUVs
By Tim Nicholson · 17 Mar 2025
Fresh details of the right-hand-drive version of GWM’s updated Haval H6 have recently surfaced in Chinese media.CarsGuide has previously reported on the facelift to the Haval H6, but the latest information reveals that there will be some differences between the domestic market H6 and the version it seems Australia will get.According to Chinese site IT Home the right-hand drive version will be revealed at the Bangkok International Motor Show later this month.While it will carry over much of the Chinese version’s design, there are a few key differences. The headlights are the same but there are changes to the grille, while at the rear, the tail-lights on the RHD run the width of the car, running across the entire tailgate. The Chinese model has split tail-lights.Other changes compared with the pre-facelift model include a redesigned front apron.Bigger changes over the outgoing version are found inside. The current model has a 10.25-inch digital driver’s display and a 10.25-inch multimedia setup housed at the top of the dash.But the new RHD H6 features a bigger 14.6-inch digital multimedia screen using GWM’s Coffee OS 3.0 ‘intelligent cockpit system’.The centre console gets a redesign as well, while the H6 adopts a new two-spoke steering wheel design.The heavily revised Haval H6 will roll into local GWM dealerships in the second quarter of this year, although more specific timing is yet to be revealed.It’s also unclear if the H6 will cop a price increase when the updated model arrives. Currently the mid-size SUV starts at $33,990 (drive-away) for the entry grade petrol Premium and tops out at $45,990 for the Ultra hybrid.It is expected the updated H6 will continue to be offered in petrol and hybrid guise, but GWM has announced plans to increase its plug-in hybrid offerings in the next two years so expect a PHEV version as well.The plug-in hybrid version of the related Haval H6 GT has also just gone on sale in Australia, priced from $55,990 drive-away.The H6 competes with a long list of family SUV rivals, including the MG HS, Mitsubishi Outlander, Nissan X-Trail, Toyota RAV4, Hyundai Tucson, Mazda CX-5 and many more.It was the eighth best selling model in the mainstream medium SUV segment last year, with 8973 sales. GWM is expecting a boost in sales when the updated version arrives.
Read the article