Three hybrid families dominate global volume: Toyota's THS, Honda's e:HEV, and BYD's DM-i. They are the systems behind the cars normal buyers actually meet — the Camry, the Civic, the Qin Plus, the Song. Despite hitting similar fuel-economy numbers on paper, the three are architecturally very different, and each one feels different from behind the wheel. This guide is the side-by-side you need to read one spec sheet against the next.
Toyota THS: the original power-split hybrid
Toyota launched THS (Toyota Hybrid System) on the 1997 Prius. The fifth generation now ships on the Camry, RAV4, Highlander, Lexus ES and most of the Prius family. THS uses a planetary gearset — the "power-split device" — that mixes engine and motor torque continuously, with no separate gearbox. The engine, a small atkinson-cycle four-cylinder, can drive the wheels, charge the battery, or both, depending on what the controller asks for.
Strengths. Decades of refinement; outstandingly reliable; smooth at low and medium speed; cheap to repair because the parts are now everywhere. Empty-tank fuel consumption is 4.5–5.5 L/100 km on most THS cars, easily 6–7 L on the bigger SUVs.
Weaknesses. No plug. Tiny battery means almost no pure-EV driving — a kilometre or two at parking-lot speed. The "rubber-band" feel under hard throttle, where engine revs decouple from road speed, is the THS character trait that splits opinion.
Honda e:HEV: the two-motor series-parallel
e:HEV (badged i-MMD in Japan) skips the planetary gearset entirely. There are two motors: one mostly used as a generator, one mostly used to drive the wheels. The engine spends most of its time spinning the generator. Only at sustained highway speeds — where a direct mechanical drive is more efficient than running through two motors — does a single-clutch connect the engine to the wheels directly. That is it. No gearbox, no planetary set, no torque converter.
Strengths. Feels more like a pure EV than THS does at low speed — the front motor handles everything and the engine is just a generator. Sustained-highway efficiency is excellent thanks to the direct-drive clutch. The 2026 Civic and CR-V are some of the most refined hybrids on sale.
Weaknesses. Same as THS: no plug, no real EV range. The third generation, introduced on the 2026 Prelude with the new "S+ Shift" sportier control logic, narrows but does not close that gap.
BYD DM-i: the plug-in hybrid that drives like an EV
DM-i is closer in architecture to e:HEV than to THS — a series-parallel hybrid with one drive motor on the wheels and a generator at the engine. The decisive difference is the battery: 15–18 kWh on most DM-i 5.0 cars, versus <2 kWh on a standard THS or e:HEV. That gives DM-i 60–200 km of pure-EV range every time you plug in, and lets the engine sit idle for most short trips entirely.
Strengths. Drives as a real EV most of the day for owners who can plug in. Headline 2,100 km combined range. 46% engine thermal efficiency — higher than THS or e:HEV. Lower running cost when charged.
Weaknesses. Empty-battery fuel economy is on par with THS/e:HEV but not better. Needs an overnight plug to make sense; daytime DC charging is slow (33–50 kW) because the battery is small. The PHEV body has to carry the extra battery weight always.
Side-by-side at a glance
- Architecture: THS = planetary power split; e:HEV = single-clutch series-parallel; DM-i = single-clutch series-parallel with a big battery and a plug.
- Engine thermal efficiency: ~41% THS · ~41% e:HEV · 46% DM-i.
- Empty-tank fuel use (mid-size sedan): ~4.5 L/100 km THS · ~4.5 L/100 km e:HEV · ~3.5–4 L/100 km DM-i.
- Pure-EV range: <2 km THS · <2 km e:HEV · 60–200 km DM-i.
- Refuel? Petrol only THS · petrol only e:HEV · petrol + plug DM-i.
Which one should you actually want?
Cannot plug in — ever — and want minimum hassle: THS or e:HEV, with e:HEV slightly better for highway efficiency and THS for the longest service-life track record. Can plug in nightly: DM-i wins by a wide margin because the daily drive is electric and the engine almost never runs. Live in a market where charging is unreliable but a fuel station is everywhere: e:HEV or, if you want EV-feel, the Chinese-style EREV is a better fit than DM-i because the EREV's bigger battery still gives some EV mileage between rare charges.
The three systems are converging on the same answer — series-parallel hybrid with a small clutch — from three directions. DM-i's bet that the right move was a bigger battery and a plug has reshaped the segment globally, but THS and e:HEV remain the right answer in markets where home charging is rare and reliability matters most.

