GAC won’t confuse Australians with sub-brands


China’s GAC doesn’t plan to follow its rivals by introducing sub-brands in Australia.

Chery pioneered the trend Down Under, introducing the likes of Omoda Jaecoo and, soon, Lepas to complement its namesake brand. A fourth brand – Jetour – is also set to arrive later this year, followed by iCaur.

Fellow heavy-hitters MG and BYD have followed suit, launching IM and Denza, respectively.

However, GAC intends to expand its product portfolio – which currently includes the Emzoom, Aion UT, Aion V, and M8 – through a single, recognisable name.

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GAC Aion
GAC Aion

“We have centralised sub-brands as one GAC strategy to keep simple and direct communication with the public, customers, dealerships, media, and so on. We focus on one GAC,” local boss Kevin Shu told CarExpert.

The reason? GAC doesn’t want to further confuse Australian new-car buyers during a time of unprecedented change – at least 10 new manufacturers entered or re-entered the Australian market in 2025, and more are due to land over the coming months.

“More choice, [makes it] more difficult to choose. So we keep one brand, one GAC,” said Mr Shu.

“For GAC in the Australia market, we want to go along with our customer. We want to keep the customer in our platform forever.”

And, unlike Chery, BYD and MG, GAC has yet to establish credibility locally, having only commenced operations late last year.

Hyptec SSR
Hyptec SSR