DM-i 5.0, marketed as Super DM, is BYD's fifth-generation plug-in hybrid system, launched in 2024 and now standard across the Qin, Song, Seal and Sealion DM-i lineups. It is the system behind the headline figures — 46.06% engine thermal efficiency, 2.9 L/100 km fuel consumption, and 2,100 km of combined range — that defined a new global benchmark for PHEVs. This guide explains what DM-i actually is, what changed in the 5.0 generation, and why those numbers are not marketing fluff.
What "DM" means
"DM" stands for Dual Mode: a single car with two completely separate power paths. A petrol engine drives a generator to make electricity; one or more electric motors drive the wheels. A small clutch can also let the engine drive the wheels directly when that is the most efficient choice. In effect, the car behaves as a series hybrid most of the time, a parallel hybrid on the motorway, and a pure EV whenever the battery has charge. DM-i is the efficiency-tuned branch of this idea — sister to the performance-tuned DM-p and the off-road DM-o.
What changed in 5.0
Five things, all measurable on the same car:
- A new 1.5 L "Xiaoyun" engine reaches 46.06% peak thermal efficiency, the highest figure ever certified for a production petrol engine. The previous generation peaked at 43.04%.
- EHS electric hybrid system — the planetary unit that houses the generator and drive motor — is 10.5 kg lighter and 20% more power-dense than the 4.0 unit.
- Power-control unit uses BYD's own silicon-carbide chips; power density is up 70%.
- The Blade Battery gains 15.9% energy density in its PHEV variant, so the same physical pack holds more range without growing.
- Energy-management software rewritten end-to-end so the engine, generator, motor and battery now plan their work tens of seconds ahead instead of reacting tick-by-tick.
How it drives
From the seat, DM-i 5.0 feels like an EV almost all the time. Under 60–80 km/h the engine is off entirely; the front motor handles every kilometre on battery. Above motorway speed the clutch closes and the engine drives the wheels directly because it is then in its efficiency sweet spot. Heavy demand — overtaking, climbing, an empty battery — brings the generator online to top up the buffer while the motor still does the actual driving.
The two regimes most owners notice: a fully charged car runs as a pure EV for 60–200 km depending on trim, and an empty battery still returns 2.9–3.8 L/100 km because the engine never has to drive an inefficient driveline.
The 2,100 km headline
That figure is real but it is a CLTC, full-tank, full-charge number on the new Qin L DM-i and Seal 06 DM-i. The breakdown: a 65 L fuel tank running at 2.9 L/100 km gives roughly 2,200 km of engine range; the 15.8 kWh PHEV Blade battery adds 80 km of CLTC EV range; together they round to 2,100 km. Real-world WLTP-style driving cuts that by ~30%, which still puts the cars at 1,400–1,500 km between fill-ups — more than any diesel saloon.
Why competitors are scrambling
For a decade Toyota's THS was the efficiency benchmark. DM-i 5.0 surpassed it on three axes (engine efficiency, EV range, total range) at a lower price. Geely countered in April 2026 with i-HEV, claiming 48.4% engine efficiency; Chery Kunpeng chased the 2 L/100 km bar; Honda redesigned e:HEV. None of them currently match the 2,100 km combined-range figure on a saloon.
The trade-offs to know before buying
DM-i is brilliantly efficient but it is not a sports car. The 1.5 L engine and modest motor make for relaxed, not rapid, acceleration; if you want speed, the DM-p tune doubles up motors and adds AWD. Maximum DC charging is modest (33–50 kW on most trims) because the battery is small and the assumption is that you will plug in at home overnight or run the engine on long trips. And the engineering only makes sense if you actually plug it in: skip the charging routine and the car is still efficient, but you waste its biggest asset.

