XPeng Launches X9 EREV: China's First Extended-Range Hybrid Minivan
XPeng has officially launched the X9 EREV, the company's first extended-range electric vehicle (EREV), expanding beyond its pure battery-electric lineup. Priced at 309,800 yuan (approximately $43,550 USD) in China, the hybrid minivan comes in 11.5% below its pre-sale price and undercuts the pure-electric X9 BEV variant.

What Makes the X9 EREV Different
The X9 EREV represents XPeng's strategic pivot toward hybrid powertrains to address range anxiety—a persistent barrier to EV adoption in markets where charging infrastructure remains limited. Unlike the pure-electric X9 BEV, the EREV variant combines battery power with a gasoline range extender.

Extended-Range Electric Vehicle (EREV) architecture uses a series hybrid system where a gasoline engine generates electricity to charge the battery rather than directly powering the wheels. The vehicle operates as a pure EV under normal conditions, with the engine serving as an onboard generator when the battery depletes.
Technical Specifications

The X9 EREV pairs a 63.3 kWh LFP (lithium iron phosphate) battery with a 60-liter (15.9-gallon) fuel tank. According to XPeng, this configuration delivers a combined range of 1,602 km (995 miles) under CLTC testing conditions—China's official fuel economy standard, which typically yields more optimistic figures than EPA testing.
The vehicle features XPeng's 800V electrical architecture with 5C charging capability. The company claims the battery can add 313 km (194 miles) of range in just 10 minutes at compatible ultra-fast charging stations—though this represents peak charging speed under optimal conditions.

Market Context and Strategy

The X9 EREV launch signals XPeng's broader strategic shift. The company announced plans to release seven models with dual powertrains—both BEV (battery electric vehicle) and EREV variants—in 2025. This dual-powertrain strategy mirrors approaches by Chinese competitors like Li Auto, which has found significant success with EREV technology in the domestic market.

The pricing strategy is notable: at 309,800 yuan, the X9 EREV comes in below the pure-electric version, potentially making hybrid technology more accessible to Chinese buyers who want EV benefits without range limitations. This inverts the typical pricing hierarchy where hybrids command premiums over conventional vehicles.
Availability and Market Focus

The X9 EREV is currently available only in the Chinese market. XPeng has not announced plans to bring the vehicle to the United States or other international markets. The company's U.S. presence remains limited, with no current retail operations or charging infrastructure partnerships in North America.
For American buyers interested in extended-range electric minivans, current options remain limited to vehicles like the Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid, which uses a different plug-in hybrid architecture where the gasoline engine can directly power the wheels.

The Bigger Picture
XPeng's move into EREV technology reflects broader trends in the Chinese automotive market, where range-extended EVs have gained significant traction as a bridge technology. While pure EVs dominate policy discussions and headlines, many Chinese consumers have gravitated toward EREVs as a practical compromise that delivers electric driving for daily commutes while eliminating range anxiety on longer trips.
Whether this technology strategy will extend to international markets—or whether XPeng will focus on pure EVs for exports—remains to be seen. For now, the X9 EREV represents XPeng's bet that Chinese buyers want the flexibility of dual powertrains, even as the country rapidly expands its charging infrastructure.


