Most BYD plug-in hybrids run the efficiency-tuned DM-i 5.0 system. But two close cousins live on the same platform: DM-p for performance, and DM-o for off-road. They share the dual-mode idea — engine plus electric motors — but tune the hardware and software for completely different jobs. This guide explains what changes between them and which BYD models use which.
Same DNA, different missions
The "DM" in all three systems still stands for Dual Mode: petrol engine plus electric motor(s), with a clutch that can also let the engine drive the wheels directly. The differences are in the choice of engine, the number and placement of the motors, the battery output spec and the software calibration.
- DM-i — "Intelligent": front-wheel-drive, one engine, one drive motor, software tuned to keep the engine off whenever possible. Best fuel economy.
- DM-p — "Powerful": AWD, one engine, two drive motors (front and rear), bigger battery output, calibrated for speed. Best acceleration.
- DM-o — "Off-road": longitudinal engine, body-on-frame chassis, an electric motor per wheel or per axle, with locked-axle electronic torque-vectoring. Best for serious off-road and towing.
DM-p in detail
Take the Han L DM-p as the canonical example. The same 1.5T engine and front motor as DM-i, plus a rear motor that adds >200 kW. Total system output reaches 700–900 hp depending on trim; 0–100 km/h falls to 2.7–4.3 seconds. The battery is physically larger and rated for far higher peak discharge so the rear motor can hold full power for repeated launches. Software keeps the engine running at moderate load most of the time so the motors can deliver the headline acceleration cleanly.
DM-p makes sense when you want a luxury PHEV that is genuinely fast — Tang DM-p, Han DM-p, Song Plus DM-p, and most of the Denza N7/N9 hybrid range use it. The trade-off versus DM-i is fuel economy: a DM-p sedan burns 5–6 L/100 km empty-battery, double the DM-i figure, because the rear motor and bigger battery add weight.
DM-o in detail
DM-o is the most architecturally different of the three. The engine sits longitudinally instead of transversely. The body sits on a ladder frame instead of a unibody. Power reaches the wheels through electric motors at every axle — sometimes one per wheel — rather than a transverse FWD-style EHS unit. The system has its own gearbox between engine and front axle for low-range crawling, and an "Energy Center Lock" function that locks all axles electronically so a slipping wheel never robs torque.
You see DM-o in BYD's Fang Cheng Bao (Formula Leopard) brand — the Bao 5 and Bao 8 boxy SUVs — and at the top, in the four-motor Yangwang U8, which uses a stretched DM-o derivative with one motor per wheel for tank-turn and wading capability up to a metre deep. Land-Rover-rivals built on EV architecture rather than retrofitted onto a diesel chassis.
How to tell which one you are looking at
The badges are the easiest tell. DM-i, DM-p and DM-o appear as suffixes on the model name (Song Plus DM-i, Han DM-p, Bao 5 is DM-o under the skin). If the badge just says "DM-i" you are looking at a transverse, front-driven PHEV tuned for economy; "DM-p" tells you AWD, dual-motor, performance focus; "DM-o" is rare and lives almost exclusively on Fang Cheng Bao and Yangwang.
Which one should you actually want?
For 95% of buyers, DM-i is the right answer: the system is fundamentally more efficient, costs less, and still feels fast enough for daily driving thanks to instant electric torque off the line. DM-p is the choice when 0–100 km/h time genuinely matters — a Han DM-p will out-drag most petrol BMWs while still claiming PHEV running costs. DM-o is a niche pick for buyers who want a true expedition vehicle with an electric drivetrain underneath; if you do not need a locked ladder-frame chassis and a metre of wading depth, you do not need DM-o.
What none of them is
None of these is an EREV. The engine in a DM-i, DM-p or DM-o car can mechanically drive the wheels at motorway speeds when the software decides that is the most efficient choice. In a true EREV, like Li Auto's range-extender SUVs, the engine never drives the wheels directly under any condition. That clutch is the line between "PHEV" and "EREV" in Chinese marketing — and the line BYD chose to keep on every car it builds.

