CS
CarSorted
HomeComparisonsBYD Sealion 6 vs Leapmotor B10
Spec Battle Updated 20 April 2026 5 min read

BYD Sealion 6 vs Leapmotor B10

Two electric SUVs go head to head. Which EV is the better buy for Australian drivers in 2026?

Specifications and pricing correct at time of publishing. Prices are RRP before on-road costs unless stated otherwise. Always confirm with the manufacturer or dealer before purchasing.

SpecBYDLeapmotor
Price (RRP)$42,990$38,990
Range (WLTP)92km361km
Battery18.3 kWh56.2 kWh
Power160kW160kW
0-100 km/h7.9s8s
Max DC Charge150kW140kW
10-80% Charge Time26 min20 min
Fuel Economy1.1 kWh/100km
Boot Space400L382L
Towing1,000kg1,500kg
Warranty6yr / 150k km6yr / 150k km
ANCAP Safety5 Stars5 Stars

Price Breakdown

The BYD Sealion 6 starts from $42,990 before on-road costs, while the Leapmotor B10 opens at $38,990. That makes the Leapmotor B10 the more affordable entry point by $4,000.

Once you factor in stamp duty, registration, CTP insurance, and dealer delivery, expect to add roughly 8-12% on top of the RRP depending on your state. That puts estimated driveaway prices in the ballpark of $47,289 and $42,889 respectively.

Both models qualify for Fringe Benefit Tax (FBT) exemption, which is a significant advantage for salary-sacrificed novated leases. Depending on your tax bracket, this can save $5,000-$15,000+ per year compared to an equivalent ICE vehicle.

Safety Rundown

Both the BYD Sealion 6 and Leapmotor B10 hold a 5-star ANCAP safety rating. Adult occupant protection scored 89% for the BYD Sealion 6 and 93% for the Leapmotor B10.

Where the two diverge is in active safety technology. The Leapmotor B10 packs more ADAS features with 8 out of 10 key systems fitted, compared to 6 in the BYD Sealion 6.

Both include the essentials: autonomous emergency braking, lane keep assist, adaptive cruise control, a reversing camera. Airbag count is 7 in the BYD Sealion 6 and 7 in the Leapmotor B10.

Feature Showdown

The BYD Sealion 6 features a 12.8-inch touchscreen, while the Leapmotor B10 gets a 14.6-inch display and 10.3-inch instruments. Apple CarPlay and Android Auto are standard across both.

The Leapmotor B10 counters with panoramic roof that the BYD Sealion 6 does not offer. Which feature set matters more depends on your daily routine and priorities.

Drivetrain

The BYD Sealion 6 uses a Plug-in Hybrid producing 160kW and 300Nm of torque, sent through a auto to a FWD layout. It covers the 0-100km/h sprint in 7.9 seconds.

The Leapmotor B10 responds with a Electric making 160kW and 240Nm, paired to a automatic driving the rear wheels. It gets to 100km/h in 8 seconds.

Power output is identical on paper, so the difference comes down to tuning, weight distribution, and suspension. In the real-world sprint, the BYD Sealion 6 is 0.1s quicker. For most buyers, the way each car feels day-to-day matters more than outright acceleration.

Battery: 18.3kWh (BYD Sealion 6) vs 56.2kWh (Leapmotor B10), giving WLTP ranges of 92km and 361km. DC fast charging peaks at 150kW (BYD Sealion 6) vs 140kW (Leapmotor B10).

Space & Comfort

The BYD Sealion 6 measures 4,775mm long on a 2,765mm wheelbase, 260mm longer than the Leapmotor B10 at 4,515mm (2,735mm wheelbase). The longer wheelbase on the BYD Sealion 6 generally means more rear legroom.

Boot space is 400L in the BYD Sealion 6 and 382L in the Leapmotor B10, giving the BYD Sealion 6 a 18L advantage.

For towing, the Leapmotor B10 leads with a 1,500kg braked capacity vs 1,000kg. That 500kg difference matters if you regularly hitch up.

Turning Circle

Kerb-to-kerb diameter. Smaller turns easier in tight carparks and U-turns.

10.8m to 11.0m

Leapmotor B10 Style BEV
10.8mTighter
Best
BYD Sealion 6 Essential
11.0m
Worst
BYD Sealion 6
11.0m · Good

Based on 11.0m turning circle:

  • U-turn on standard street (7m+ wide)
  • Standard parking bay
  • Tight carparks
  • Narrow laneways
Leapmotor B10
10.8m · Good

Based on 10.8m turning circle:

  • U-turn on standard street (7m+ wide)
  • Standard parking bay
  • Tight carparks
  • Narrow laneways

Turning circle ratings

Under 10m, Excellent
10 to 11m, Good
11 to 12m, Average
Over 12m, Large

True Cost to Own

Running cost data is not yet available for both models. We will update when figures are confirmed.

Warranty: 6 years / 150,000km (BYD Sealion 6) vs 6 years / 150,000km (Leapmotor B10). Both match on warranty length.

Who Should Buy Which?

Buy the BYD Sealion 6 if: You need more boot space, or prefer BYD's approach to design and ownership experience.

Buy the Leapmotor B10 if: You want the lower entry price, need stronger towing, or prefer Leapmotor's approach to design and ownership experience.

The Verdict

The Leapmotor B10 takes 5 of 8 key spec categories and comes in at a lower price. The best pick depends on what you value most. Explore the full specs for each model below.

Disclaimer: All information in this comparison was believed to be correct at the time of publishing (20 April 2026). Prices are manufacturer recommended retail prices (RRP) and may vary by state, dealer, and options. Driveaway costs include estimated on-road costs for Victoria. Fuel economy figures are WLTP/ADR combined cycle. Specifications can change without notice. Always verify with the manufacturer before making a purchase decision. CarSorted does not accept payment for recommendations.

Published by CarSorted Editorial Team · 20 April 2026

Comments (0)

Sign in to join the conversation

No comments yet. Be the first!

More head-to-heads

Other matchups worth a look

Same segment, similar money. Tap any pair for the full side-by-side spec sheet.

All comparisons

Images are representative. Actual variant trim, colour and equipment may differ.

Browse all cars · All SUVs