The BYD Atto 1 is currently Australia’s cheapest electric vehicle (EV), and that makes it a very important car.

We often talk about EVs in the context of SUVs, premium sedans and long-range family cars, but the Atto 1 is something simpler and arguably more relevant. It is a small, affordable electric city hatch that can fit into normal suburban life without demanding a luxury-car budget.
I’ve spent about a month in the Atto 1 Premium, using it mostly around Brisbane for school runs, shopping, commuting and general suburban driving. I covered roughly 1200km, and the little BYD returned an indicated average of 11.9kWh/100km (official claimed energy consumption for the Premium is 16.0kWh/100km).
This is not a perfect car, and there are some very obvious places where BYD has saved money. But it doesn’t feel like that money has been saved on the electric drivetrain, the refinement, or the fundamentals of how it drives.
This is one of the best ways for families and EV skeptics to get into a well-priced small electric car that can fit into inner-city life as an ideal second vehicle, or for those who commute to work and value space and refinement on a budget.
How much does the BYD Atto 1 cost?
There are two BYD Atto 1 variants available in Australia.

|
Model |
Price before on-road costs |
|---|---|
|
BYD Atto 1 Essential |
$23,990 |
|
BYD Atto 1 Premium |
$27,990 |
The Premium tested here costs $4000 more than the Essential, but it brings a more powerful electric motor, a larger battery, more range and more equipment.
The Essential uses a 30kWh LFP battery and 65kW/175Nm electric motor, with a claimed WLTP range of 220km. The Premium steps up to a 43.2kWh LFP battery, 115kW/220Nm motor and 310km of WLTP range.
For most buyers, the Premium looks like the better pick. The Essential’s lower price is obviously attractive, but the extra range and performance of the Premium make it a more useful car beyond very short urban trips.
Even at $27,990 before on-road costs, the Premium still looks inexpensive in the current market. It is not just cheap for an EV; it is priced in the same conversation as many petrol and hybrid city cars.
That is what makes the Atto 1 interesting. It is not trying to be a cut-price Tesla Model 3 or a cheaper BYD Dolphin. It is a genuine city car, with city-car pricing, and it happens to be electric.
To see how the BYD Atto 1 stacks up against the competition, use our comparison tool
What is the BYD Atto 1 like on the inside?
The cabin is better than you might expect for the money, but it is also where you can most clearly see the cost-cutting.

The seats are comfortable, the driving position is good, and visibility is excellent. Over a month of daily use, the Atto 1 worked well as a small family runabout. My kids didn’t complain about rear legroom or headroom, and it handled the normal routine of school bags, shopping and short suburban trips without issue.
Officially, the Atto 1 has a 308-litre boot, expanding to 1037L with the rear seatbacks folded. That is useful given the car’s size, and in practice it feels like enough for the kind of daily use this car is designed for.
However, it is worth noting the Atto 1 is a four-seater, not a five-seater. The 2+2 layout means this is not the car for families that need to accommodate three children across the rear.
Material quality is mixed. The top of the doors is covered in very hard plastic, and that is exactly where I tend to rest my arm while driving. It becomes annoying because the section around the door handle is much softer and nicer. It feels like BYD spent money in some places, but not always in the places you touch most often.




It is a similar story across the dashboard. The top of the dash is hard, while some of the trim around the buttons feels softer and more expensive. That is not unusual in a car at this price, but it does stand out because the rest of this pint-size electric hatch feels more polished than expected.
The gear selector is also not my favourite design. It sits to the left of the start button, and from a normal driving position the start button is almost hidden. You get used to feeling for it, but it is not immediately intuitive.
The selector itself requires you to push down for Drive and up for Reverse, while Park is a separate button on the side. Again, you get used to it, but it feels like a solution that is different for the sake of being different.

The steering wheel buttons also feel mediocre. This is a budget EV, so you have to expect some compromise, but these controls are used every day and they could be better without adding much cost.
On the plus side, the 10.1-inch touchscreen is excellent, and BYD includes wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. However, I found the Apple CarPlay connection did not always restart automatically when the car turned back on. I often had to go into the menu and force it to reconnect, which became irritating.
And the stereo is dreadful, to be kind. The Atto 1 has a four-speaker sound system, and this is one area where I would love to see an upgrade or at least an option for a better sound system. If this bothers you – as it did me – you can always get an aftermarket speaker upgrade.

The climate controls can also be improved. The car has some physical shortcuts, including buttons for the air-conditioning, but not enough of the important controls are physical. Some of the touchscreen icons could be larger, and the layout feels like BYD went halfway with physical controls but didn’t quite finish the job.
There are also two different buttons that seem to perform very similar air-conditioning functions. It would make more sense if one controlled power and the other adjusted fan speed or temperature.
The front USB-C port is welcome, but the USB-A outlet feels less useful in 2026. Two USB-C ports would be better.
The wireless phone charger in our car was too slow to be useful for my iPhone 17 Pro Max. It was charging at a maximum of 5-7W, which was barely keeping the battery at a stable level with wireless CarPlay on.


BYD says it should charge at 50W, but that might be specific to Android phones as it certainly doesn’t seem to support the iPhone 17’s 25W charging capability. Ultimately, you can just plug in via USB-C, but that’s a waste of a feature.
The Atto 1 comes with a normal key and an NFC card for your wallet, which you can tap on the window to lock or unlock the car. Both worked well during our test.
We got over all the little things we found annoying pretty quickly because the cabin is actually very good overall. The basics are strong. The seats are comfortable, the interior is surprisingly quiet, the driving position is good, and the Atto 1 feels more substantial than its size and price suggest.
To see how the BYD Atto 1 stacks up against the competition, use our comparison tool
What’s under the bonnet?
There are two different Atto 1 drivetrains available in Australia.

|
Specification |
Atto 1 Essential |
Atto 1 Premium |
|---|---|---|
|
Battery |
30kWh LFP |
43.2kWh LFP |
|
Power |
65kW |
115kW |
|
Torque |
175Nm |
220Nm |
|
Drive type |
Front-wheel drive |
Front-wheel drive |
|
0-100km/h |
11.1 seconds |
9.1 seconds |
|
WLTP range |
220km |
310km |
|
Claimed consumption |
15.5kWh/100km |
16.0kWh/100km |
|
Max AC charge rate |
11kW |
11kW |
|
Max DC charge rate |
65kW |
85kW |
The Premium’s 115kW/220Nm electric motor is more than enough for a small city car. In fact, it is one of the best parts of the car.
The Atto 1 does not feel underpowered. It is zippy off the line, responsive in traffic, and quick enough that you never feel like you have bought a cheap EV and therefore have to accept weak performance.
BYD says the Premium will do the 0-100km/h sprint in 9.1 seconds, but the number is less important than how it feels around town. It has the instant torque delivery you expect from an EV, but it is also well calibrated. It does not constantly spin the front wheels, and it does not feel nervous or overdone.
The official WLTP range is 310km, and my indicated 11.9kWh/100km average suggests the Atto 1 can be very efficient in suburban use. That result was achieved in Brisbane driving, not a controlled test, so it should be treated as an observed figure rather than a laboratory comparison.

Charging is one of the Atto 1’s strengths. Both variants support 11kW AC charging, via which BYD says a 0-100 per cent AC charge takes 3.5 hours. BYD also claims a 10-80 per cent DC fast-charge takes 30 minutes, with the Premium supporting up to 85kW of DC power.
For a city EV, that 11kW AC capability matters. If you have three-phase power and the right home charger, the Atto 1 can be topped up quickly at home. That makes it much easier to live with than the numbers on the spec sheet might suggest. Also when compared against the MG 4 – a car which I spent a year with – the 11kW versus 7kW charging rate is a massive time-saver.
As with any EV, though, the ownership experience changes if you can’t charge at home. The Atto 1 makes the most sense for people who can plug in overnight or during the day at home or work.
To see how the BYD Atto 1 stacks up against the competition, use our comparison tool
How does the BYD Atto 1 drive?
This is where the Atto 1 impressed me the most. It drives well. It is comfortable, quiet, easy to place on the road, and more refined than I expected for such an inexpensive EV.

The acceleration is genuinely good for this type of car. The Atto 1 Premium feels quick enough around town, and the torque delivery is smooth and predictable. It does not have the strange, overly aggressive front-drive wheelspin that some small EVs can have, and that makes it feel more mature than expected.
The steering is good, the brakes are strong, and the driving position is very good. Outward visibility is excellent, which helps make the car feel even smaller and easier to manoeuvre than it already is.
At 3990mm long, 1720mm wide and 1590mm tall, the Atto 1 is properly compact. Around the city and suburbs, that makes it very easy to park and very easy to drive through traffic. You can put it almost anywhere.
The ride is a little firm, but I don’t think it is a deal-breaker. Some people may find it firmer than they expect, but across the suburban roads I used it on it never felt harsh or poorly sorted. It feels like a small car, but not a cheap and nasty one.

The more impressive part is the noise insulation. Because it is an EV, there is no engine noise to mask tyre and road noise, yet the Atto 1 is very quiet inside. You can barely hear much noise intruding into the cabin, so BYD has clearly not stripped out all the sound deadening materials or other refinement measures to hit the low price.
If it had obvious road roar or wind noise, it would constantly remind you this is a cheap EV. Instead, it feels calm and surprisingly polished.
The reversing camera is also very good, and that combines with the excellent visibility to make the Atto 1 easy to live with in tight urban spaces. It really is an ideal city car.
The main annoyance is the constant beeping of the safety systems. Even if the volume is not particularly loud, the Atto 1 finds a lot of reasons to alert you.

The driver-assistance systems are well intentioned, but the constant alerts can become frustrating. You can turn them off, but you have to do so each time you turn the vehicle on.
This is not unique to BYD, and many newer models have become too eager to sound warnings, but in the Atto 1 it was one of the things I noticed most across the month.
To see how the BYD Atto 1 stacks up against the competition, use our comparison tool
What do you get?
The BYD Atto 1 is available in two variants: Essential and Premium. The Premium builds on the Essential with a larger battery, more power, more range, and extra comfort equipment.




2026 BYD Atto 1 Essential standard equipment highlights:
- 15-inch steel wheels with 175/65 R15 Hankook tyres
- Tyre repair kit
- Automatic halogen headlights
- Keyless entry and start
- NFC card key access
- 7.0-inch digital instrument cluster
- 10.1-inch touchscreen infotainment system
- Wireless and wired Apple CarPlay and Android Auto
- BYD App Suite, including apps such as Disney+ and YouTube
- 4G cloud services
- Over-the-air software update capability
- Voice control via ‘Hi BYD’
- Four-speaker sound system
- USB-A and USB-C outlets
- Leatherette upholstery
- Four-way manually adjustable front seats
- Leatherette-wrapped steering wheel
- Two-way steering column adjustment
- 50:50-split/folding rear seats
- Vehicle-to-load capability
- 308L boot capacity, expanding to 1037L with the rear seats folded
The Essential is clearly built to hit a price, but it still covers the basics well. You get the same 10.1-inch infotainment touchscreen, digital instrument cluster, smartphone mirroring, keyless entry and start, and V2L functionality as the more expensive Premium.


The BYD Atto 1 Premium adds:
- 16-inch alloy wheels with 185/55 R16 Hankook tyres
- Automatic LED headlights
- Rain-sensing wipers
- Power-folding exterior mirrors
- Wireless phone charger
- Six-way power-adjustable driver’s seat
- Four-way power-adjustable passenger seat
- Heated front seats
- Four-way steering column adjustment
- One-touch up/down driver’s window
- Surround-view camera
For the money, the Premium is the one I’d be buying. The extra equipment is nice, especially the powered and heated front seats, LED headlights and surround-view camera, but the bigger reason to step up is the extra performance and range.
To see how the BYD Atto 1 stacks up against the competition, use our comparison tool
Is the BYD Atto 1 safe?
The BYD Atto 1 has a five-star ANCAP safety rating. The rating applies to all variants, following category scores of 82 per cent for adult occupant protection, 86 per cent for child occupant protection, 76 per cent for vulnerable road user protection and 79 per cent for safety assist.

ANCAP says the rating is based on testing of the BYD Dolphin Surf, as this car is known in Europe, and that it has confirmed the Australian-market Atto 1 has the same safety specification.
Standard safety equipment includes autonomous emergency braking, lane support, speed assistance with traffic sign recognition, and six airbags. ANCAP notes a centre front airbag is not available.
From a driver’s perspective, the Atto 1 feels solid and well built. It does not feel like a flimsy budget car, and I was perfectly happy driving my kids around in it.
The frustration is the way some of the safety systems communicate with the driver. There is too much beeping, and it can become annoying in everyday driving. That is something BYD needs to continue refining, because safety technology is only useful if people don’t immediately go looking for ways to turn it off.
To see how the BYD Atto 1 stacks up against the competition, use our comparison tool
How much does the BYD Atto 1 cost to run?
BYD Australia covers its vehicles with a six-year, 150,000km warranty and its batteries with an eight-year, 160,000km warranty.

The Atto 1 Premium’s 43.2kWh LFP battery gives it a claimed 310km WLTP range, while the official claimed energy consumption figure is 16.0kWh/100km.
Service intervals are 12 months or 20,000km, whichever comes first.
To see how the BYD Atto 1 stacks up against the competition, use our comparison tool
CarExpert’s Take on the BYD Atto 1 Premium
The BYD Atto 1 Premium is exactly the sort of EV that Australia needs more of.

It is affordable, efficient, easy to drive and genuinely useful as a city car. It does not try to be a long-distance family SUV, and it does not need to. It makes the most sense as a first EV, a second family car, or a low-cost urban commuter for someone who can charge at home.
The Atto 1 is not perfect. The stereo is bad (really bad), the wireless phone charger is weak, the beeping is annoying, the climate controls need work, and some of the interior plastics feel cheap in the places you touch most often.
But the fundamentals are very good. It is quiet, comfortable, zippy, easy to park, efficient and better built than its price suggests.
The most important thing is that it doesn’t feel like BYD saved money on the electric drivetrain. That is what makes the Atto 1 so convincing.
For the money, this could be the best entry-level EV available in Australia. It is not just cheap, it is good.

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