BYD Atto 3 EVO new car review

£37,000 - £39,000
6.5out of 10
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10 Second Review

BYD has completely revitalised its lower mid-sized EV crossover, the Atto 3, to create this very different Atto 3 EVO model. It goes faster, charges quicker, feels much nicer inside, is better connected and now drives primarily from the rear. Time to reconsider one perhaps?

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Detailed ratings

Compact Full Electric Cars
Overall
65 %
Economy
6 / 10
Space
7 / 10
Value
7 / 10
Handling
6 / 10
Depreciation
6 / 10
Styling
6 / 10
Build
6 / 10
Comfort
7 / 10
Insurance
6 / 10
Performance
7 / 10
Equipment
8 / 10

Background

Back in 2022, what would turn out to be a remarkable Chinese brand launched an unremarkable car in the UK, its first, the BYD Atto 3, a lower-mid-sized EV. Since then, the company's astonishing sales growth has set the template for what all the many aspiring Oriental brands which have followed are trying to be. And so many new and tempting EV and Plug-in Hybrid BYD products have followed that the Atto 3 has got rather forgotten. Until the complete re-think with this model that in early 2026 created this car, the Atto 3 EVO.
The name and the relatively light exterior makeover suggest this to be the kind of mid-term facelift that really wouldn't have helped this car much against all the many lower mid-sized electric crossover family hatchbacks that have been launched at the £35,000-£40,000 price point since this car's original introduction. But that's not what's on offer here. Switching from front to rear-wheel drive is a fundamental change; so is the move from 400V to 800V electrical infrastructure that brings vastly faster DC-charging. There's also now an under-bonnet 'frunk', a much more sophisticated infotainment system and more power than any segment rival. BYD doesn't do things by halves.
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Range data

MinMax
Price3700039000
Max Speed (mph)112112
0-62 mph (s)5.55.5
Electric WLTP-Rated Driving Range (miles)292317292317
MinMax
Length (mm)44554455
Width (mm)18751875
Height (mm)16151615
Boot Capacity (l)490490

Driving experience

How much power does an ordinary lower-mid-sized family hatch or crossover really need these days? Well the current electric era is gradually redefining the answer to that question, with extra braked horses no longer dependent on combustion size but merely a software tweak away. To begin with, EV makers have used this capability conservatively; even now, the starting total output norm in the class this BYD Atto 3 EVO competes in is no more than around 150-170PS. But as battery sizes get larger and manufacturer range anxiety lessens, you can expect that norm to rise significantly. As is evidenced here.
You won't be expecting the 'EVO' tag added to this Atto 3 to make it into any kind of EV hot hatch, but the base RWD 'Design' version does now develop a hefty 313PS - about the same as a Golf R super hatch was offering a decade or so back in the combustion era. And today's Golf R, by the way, can get nowhere near the output total of the fastest Atto 3 EVO dual motor 'Excellence' model, which fronts up with an astonishing 449PS. Which is enough to get that top BYD to 62mph in just 3.9s, 1.6s quicker than the already impressive 5.5s stat of the RWD version.
There are more significant things going on as part of this update than the mere addition of a prodigious slug of extra power. The Atto 3 EVO is effectively a completely different car from its predecessor under the skin, mainly because drive now comes predominantly from a motor on the rear axle, rather than one at the front. Only two other cars have ever undergone a similar mid-life transformation, both interestingly in this BYD's same class, the Volvo XC40 and the Polestar 2.
An arguably even more significant engineering shift lies in the way that the Atto 3 EVO's drive battery - now increased in size from 60.4kWh to 74.8kWh - now no longer sits in a separate casing in the chassis but has its cells mounted in a 'cell-to-body' arrangement integrated into the vehicle floor. Which makes the car lighter and more rigid, so theoretically better to drive and more frugal.
The 'better to drive' bit is helped by the switch from a four-link to a more complex five-link suspension arrangement. But it's also something that BYD is still working on. The light steering and intrusive ADAS features here might still put you off this car as much as was the case with its predecessor. But things are changing - and so is the drive range you can expect, up from the 260 mile figure of the original model to 316 miles with the RWD Atto 3 EVO 'Design' model. The weight of an extra motor on the front axle drops the range figure of the dual motor AWD 'Excellence' version (which has the same 74.8kWh battery as its lesser stablemate) to 292 miles. These figures of course require constant selection of the most frugal of the provided drive modes, Eco: the other three settings are Normal, Sport and Snow.
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Design and build

Virtually everything about this Atto 3 has changed except the thing you'll first notice - the exterior styling. You'd really have to be a BYD sales person to tell this EVO version apart from its predecessor. There are slimmer side skirts and subtle bumper changes, but that's about it. So the look remains uber-conservative. Still, that might be one of the things that attracts you to it. Thankfully, the cringey 'Build Your Dreams' badge on the tailgate is now gone.
Size-wise, the 4,455mm body length (and the price) continues to position this BYD amongst lower mid-sized category EVs - think Ford Explorer, Volkswagen ID.4 and Renault Scenic E-TEC; though despite the packaging enhancements made possible by the switch from a front to a rear-driven powertrain, it still can't claim to be quite as versatile as cars like those.
The cabin shows far greater changes than the exterior panel work as part of the EVO update. In fact, interior is now one of the very nicest in the segment, with virtually every surface lined in soft-touch leather or suede. There's now a more conventional steering wheel design, the gear selector has been moved onto the steering column (freeing up centre console space for a wireless charging mat) and the old model's rather unpleasant chemical cabin smell has gone.
Objectors to gimmickry might be pleased to find that the old rotating centre screen has also been consigned to history - though we always rather liked it. The middle monitor (15.6-inches in size) is now locked into landscape mode and has been updated with fresh software. It now has embedded Google services, including Maps and Google's AI assistant. It's paired with a larger (but still rather over-busy) 8.8-inch instrument screen.
If you remember the original version of this car, then you'll also remember that the cabin had a few extrovert touches - guitar string-style pockets on the door cards, CD rack-style air vents and rounded door handles. These have all been retained. And the driver's seat has gained adjustable lumbar support. But you still have to operate climate functions through the central touchscreen.
Rear seat space is still pretty generous by class standards; two big adults will fit in easily. That's despite the fact that boot capacity has grown by 50-litres to 490-litres, though the e-motor's move to the rear axle has removed a lot of the previous space beneath the boot floor. There is 1,360-litres with the rear bench folded. And the lack of a front motor has freed up 101-litres of under-bonnet 'frunk' space.
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Market and model

Expect Atto 3 EVO pricing to sit in the £37,000-£39,000 bracket - which is bang on par for the segment against strong sellers like the Skoda Enyaq and the Ford Explorer. Unlike rival makers though, BYD doesn't have lots of pricier trim levels that you have to stretch to in order to get the kind of plusher spec you'd probably ideally want. This Atto 3 simply comes in two fully kitted-out forms - the RWD 'Design' version and the top AWD dual motor 'Excellence' flagship model.
Either way, you get an awful lot of kit as standard. LED headlights, 18-inch alloy wheels, LED tail lamps, rear privacy glass, a powered tailgate, keyless entry, all-round parking sensors, adaptive cruise control, Hill Descent Control and a 360-degree view camera system. There's also a heat pump and a V2L system so that you can plug external devices into the car's drive battery. Inside, there's vegan leather upholstery, heat for the front seats, a wireless charging mat, power adjustment and ventilation for the driver's seat with lumbar support, dual zone automatic air conditioning with a PM2.5 filter, ambient lighting, an 8.8-inch LCD instrument panel and heated rear seats.
Media connectivity is taken care of by 15.6-inch touchscreen with Google built-in. It features a navigation system with Google Maps, intelligent voice control, on-board 4G connectivity, cloud services, an eight-speaker audio system and of course Android Auto and Apple CarPlay.
As usual with a Chinese brand, is a very complete set of ADAS driving assistance features. Including Automatic Emergency Braking with Forward Collision Warning, Front Cross-Traffic Alert, Rear Cross-Traffic alert, Blind Spot Detection, Emergency Lane Keeping Assist, Intelligent Speed Limit Control, Lane Departure Assist, Traffic Sign Recognition, Rear Collision Warning, Door Opening Warning and Driver Monitoring, including an Occupant Monitoring system. And of course all the usual front, side and curtain airbags, plus a front centre bag, all linked to an eCall system.
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Cost of ownership

A big drawback of the original Atto 3 was its feeble 88kW DC charging speed. An upgrade to 220kW, made possible by the switch from a 400V to an 800V ultra-rapid charging electrical infrastructure, changes things considerably. And means that a 10-80% DC top-up now takes only 25 minutes. A full charge using an 11kW AC wallbox at home needs eight hours - or a couple of hours more if you've only a single-phase 7.4kW supply.
To preserve driving range in cold conditions, a heat pump is standard (which draws want for the cabin from the surrounding ambient air and is something that's normally a pricey extra in this segment). That's an unusual standard fitment in this class and BYD reckons it could preserve range by 10-20% in colder months. The Atto 3 EVO has V2L technology, so small devices can be plugged into the car's drive battery.
There's a six month/90,000 mile warranty, while the battery gets an eight year/120,000 mile warranty.
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Summary

This is a very different kind of Atto 3, as is appropriate given how differently BYD is now seen compared to the way it was at this car's original launch. It's a pity though, that the subtle changes to this model's exterior look don't reflect the fundamental updates instigated below the surface; this is - in every way that really matters - essentially a completely new car.
And for a completely new car, we'd have hoped for a completely new, more Europeanised driving experience. Unfortunately, the Atto 3 EVO can't offer that, even though in terms of power output it's now now ridiculously well endowed for a mainstream compact family hatch or crossover of this sort. You might struggle with the intrusive nature of its ADAS features too, a usual Chinese brand issue.
In pretty much every other way though, there's lots to like here. DC charging speed, interior quality and media connectivity are all class-leading. Range could still be better, but is much improved. As is the Atto 3. Give it a second look.
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