The YangWang U8L is BYD's current ultra-luxury flagship SUV, sold in a single, fully-loaded "Dingshi Edition" trim priced at RMB 1.28 million (about $179,690) — a small fraction of what comparable Western hyper-luxury SUVs cost, despite matching or beating them on raw capability. On a dealer-floor walkaround, the boxy, G-Wagen-adjacent U8L showed off a genuinely enormous cabin trimmed in camel-tan leather, a quad-motor powertrain producing 1,180 hp, and party-trick engineering carried over from the standard U8: a 360-degree "tank turn" performed entirely on the spot, and an emergency floating mode that lets the SUV survive being accidentally driven into deep floodwater.
Performance & Specs
The U8L runs BYD's e4 "Yisifang" platform: a 2.0-litre turbocharged engine acting as a generator, paired with four independent electric motors (one per wheel) for a combined 880 kW (1,180 hp) and 1,520 Nm of torque, enough for a 3.5-second 0-100 km/h time in a vehicle weighing well over three tonnes. Independent motor control at each wheel is also what enables the U8L's signature "tank turn" — a full 360-degree rotation on the spot without moving forward or back, achieved by spinning the wheels on each side in opposite directions, much like a tracked military vehicle pivoting around its own center. It's a genuinely rare capability among production SUVs of any price, and one that requires exactly this kind of per-wheel motor independence to pull off safely.
| Powertrain | EREV, quad-motor (one per wheel) |
|---|---|
| Power | 880 kW (1,180 hp) |
| Torque | 1,520 Nm |
| 0–100 km/h | 3.5 s |
| Battery | 55.53 kWh Blade |
| Range | 200 km EV / 1,160 km total |
| POWERTRAIN TYPE | Extended-range electric, quad-motor |
|---|---|
| HORSEPOWER | 1,180 hp (880 kW) |
| ACCELERATION | 3.5 s 0-100 km/h |
| BATTERY | 55.53 kWh Blade |
| ELECTRIC RANGE | 200 km (CLTC) |
| COMBINED RANGE | 1,160 km (CLTC) |
Dimensions & Practicality
| Length | 5,400 mm |
|---|---|
| Width | 2,049 mm |
| Height | 1,921 mm |
| Wheelbase | 3,250 mm |
At 5,400 mm long, 2,049 mm wide and riding on a 3,250 mm wheelbase, the U8L is genuinely enormous — longer than a Cadillac Escalade and wider than most full-size pickup trucks, with proportions that make it feel more like a private lounge on wheels than a conventional SUV. The extra length over the standard U8 goes almost entirely into rear-seat space, with the walkaround car's second-row captain's chairs offering genuinely limousine-grade legroom, confirmed directly in this walkaround.
Charging & Battery
The U8L's 55.53 kWh Blade battery is deliberately modest relative to the vehicle's size and power — this is an extended-range vehicle first and foremost, with a 2.0-litre engine and a 90-litre fuel tank doing most of the work on longer journeys rather than relying on a sprawling, heavy battery pack. EV-only range is 200 km CLTC, with total combined range reaching 1,160 km once the range-extender engine contributes. That's a very different philosophy from a pure-BEV luxury SUV: the U8L trades outright EV range for the reassurance of a full tank of petrol on a vehicle this heavy and this expensive to be stranded in.
| BATTERY | 55.53 kWh Blade Battery |
|---|---|
| FUEL TANK | 90 L |
| ELECTRIC RANGE | 200 km (CLTC) |
Design & Interior
The walkaround car wore a two-tone white-over-black finish with a boxy, upright greenhouse and a full-size spare wheel mounted low on the tailgate, styling cues that trade heavily on Mercedes G-Class and Land Rover Defender visual language while remaining distinctly BYD in its detailing. Inside, the cabin is trimmed almost entirely in a rich camel-tan leather, with individual seat-back tray tables, ambient lighting strips along the door panels, and captain's chairs front and rear. The steering wheel carries no visible badge in this walkaround, keeping the design deliberately understated for a vehicle this expensive. A digital instrument cluster displayed a stylized rendering of the U8L itself alongside battery charge (94%) and range readouts, with a second screen showing off-road terrain graphics reflecting the car's rugged positioning.
Technology & Features
BYD's Dingshi ("Imperial" or "Throne") Edition badge signals the single, top-spec trim this model is sold in — there's no cheaper U8L configuration to step down to, and no stripped-out base version to compromise the flagship experience the brand is clearly aiming for. Reflecting that positioning, other YangWang launches in this generation have included 24-karat gold badging as an available touch, consistent with BYD's broader pattern of offering genuine gold trim details on its most expensive flagship models. The infotainment system pairs with BYD's God's Eye A driver-assist suite, the brand's most capable ADAS tier, built on an end-to-end architecture for both highway and complex urban navigation.
Safety & ADAS
The U8L runs BYD's God's Eye A system, the top tier of the brand's three-tier ADAS naming structure, offering navigate-on-autopilot functionality on both highways and urban roads through an end-to-end neural network architecture rather than older rules-based logic. Combined with the DiSus-P suspension's active body control, the U8L's safety case leans heavily on both conventional driver-assist tech and its unusual physical capabilities — the ability to float and stay upright in flood conditions is a genuine, if rare, safety feature that most luxury SUVs on sale today simply don't offer their owners.
| ADAS LEVEL | God's Eye A (BYD's top ADAS tier) |
|---|---|
| ADAS FEATURES | Highway + urban NOA, end-to-end architecture |
Pricing & Availability
The YangWang U8L officially launched in China at RMB 1.28 million (about $179,690) in its single Dingshi Edition trim — notably below the roughly RMB 1.3 million ($188,300) pre-launch estimate that circulated in the media before the official reveal took place. As of this walkaround, the U8L is sold in China only; BYD's YangWang sub-brand has not confirmed a European or North American retail launch, so availability outside China remains unconfirmed as of July 2026.
How It Compares
Against the Lotus Eletre, the U8L offers considerably more power and the reassurance of a petrol range-extender rather than pure-BEV range anxiety, for roughly $28,000 more. The Hyptec SSR edges it on peak horsepower but can't match the U8L's tank turn, floating capability, or combined range. The real headline comparison is the Rolls-Royce Cullinan: at well under half the price, the U8L delivers more than double the horsepower and a genuinely unique capability set, even if it can't yet match a century of accumulated Rolls-Royce brand cachet.
- 1,180 hp and a 3.5-second 0-100 km/h time from a vehicle this large is genuinely remarkable
- Unique tank-turn and emergency-float capabilities aren't available on any Western luxury SUV at any price
- Undercuts the Rolls-Royce Cullinan by over $250,000 while beating it comfortably on power
- Only 200 km of EV-only range, leaning heavily on the range-extender engine for most driving
- China-only sales for now, with no confirmed export timeline to Western markets
The YangWang U8L is BYD's clearest statement yet that it can build a genuine flagship to rival the world's most expensive luxury SUVs — and at under $180,000, it undercuts Western hyper-luxury rivals by hundreds of thousands of dollars while adding party tricks (the tank turn, the floating mode) none of them can match. It's for buyers who want maximum presence, maximum power, and genuinely novel engineering, and who don't need a century-old badge to justify the price tag. Whether YangWang can eventually build the brand cachet needed to match its engineering ambition outside of China remains the genuinely open question.

