What's structurally different in 2026 versus 2023-24, why the old playbooks don't work, and how independent dealers are actually winning in this cycle.
If you're an independent dealer looking at Chinese EVs for the first time — or returning after a couple of years away — the 2026 landscape is meaningfully different from 2023–24. This guide is the short version of what's changed and how independent dealers are actually winning in this cycle.
China's passenger-vehicle market now has more individual EV models on sale than the rest of the world combined. New-energy vehicles (BEV + PHEV + EREV) account for more than half of passenger car sales in China as of late 2025. No single national distributor in any export market can stock the full Chinese range — which creates structural gaps for independent importers.
Compact LFP-battery EV SUVs with 500+ km CLTC range are now available at price points that looked impossible in 2023. This is specifically the segment where Chinese automakers have applied the most competitive pressure, and where the gap versus European and Japanese alternatives is largest.
Flagship Chinese EVs have moved from 400V to 800V to 900V in consecutive model years. Ultra-fast charging — 10%→80% in 7–10 minutes — is no longer limited to the premium tier. This reshapes fleet economics in markets with fast charger access and premium positioning in markets without.
Several high-volume Chinese models were developed in LHD and RHD simultaneously — engineered for export from day one, not retrofitted after launch. This is a meaningful quality-of-life improvement over previous generations where RHD was a best-effort afterthought.
Every previous Chinese auto export wave — 1990s vans in Africa, 2000s SUVs in the Middle East, 2010s sedans in Russia — was dominated by official distributors with national exclusives. This cycle is different for three reasons:
A dealer secures a specific fleet contract (ride-hail, rental, corporate) of 20–500 units, then imports against that contract. Working capital requirements are high, but margins are predictable because the off-take is contracted before the ship sails. This is the single most profitable independent-dealer model we see.
A dealer imports 5–20 units, runs a showroom, and retails at typical dealer margins. Lower capital intensity. Wider customer base. Slower payback per container. This works best in markets without strong official distributor presence.
A dealer notices a specific gap in the local distributor's range — for example, a luxury MPV in a market where the distributor only sells SUVs and sedans — and imports to fill that gap. Small volumes, specific customer base, often fleet-adjacent (chauffeur services, diplomatic missions, wealthy family buyers).
The single biggest mistake first-time importers make is ordering showroom flagships as their test unit. Total landed costs run higher than the dealer's existing customer base is used to paying, and the car sits unsold.
Better first-shipment strategy:
Documentation requirements haven't changed much, but the volume of model-specific homologation work has increased. A car that was EU-homologated in 2024 might have a 2026 facelift that requires re-homologation. Confirm homologation status per specific trim, not per model family.
Standard terms remain 30% T/T deposit, 70% against B/L copy, or L/C at sight for larger orders. What's new: some Chinese factories now offer extended payment terms (90–120 days from B/L) for repeat customers with proven track records. This is informally negotiated, not advertised, and only after a few successful shipments.
If you're at the "getting ready to send the first RFQ" stage, tell us your market, your rough customer price point, and any specific constraints. We'll come back with 2–3 matched vehicle suggestions and realistic lead times. No obligation.
Send an RFQ via WhatsApp or email. Our Shanghai export desk will scope your requirements and return a qualified FOB / CIF / DDP quotation — typically within one Shanghai business day.