• long running

Up to $2500 off GWM Haval H6: Lux Hybrid from $39990 (Was $42490), Ultra Hybrid from $43990 (Was $45990) Driveaway @ GWM

1150

GWM are continuing offers for their H6 range, this time for their 2024 models, previous deal was for 2023 models.
Premium, Lux, and Ultra trims remained the same price during the EOFY offer, though looks like the Lux Hybrid, Ultra Hybrid trims dropped 1K.

H6 "Normal" Price May-31 Price Current Price
Premium 33,990 31,990 31,990
Lux 36,990 34,990 34,990
Ultra 39,990 37,990 37,990
Lux Hybrid 42,490 40,990 39,990
Ultra Hybrid 45,990 44,990 43,990

Probably a worthy reminder – How To: Personalise your OzBargain front page/new deals page to see more relevant deals (and less irrelevant ones)

Related Stores

GWM HAVAL Motors Australia
GWM HAVAL Motors Australia

Comments

  • +39

    you really like GWM. That is your 2nd post this week

    I hope you get commission from the company for advertising so hard :)

    • +22

      Maybe there’s a vested interest

    • +6

      He may be getting communism

    • +55

      Really? You are giving him a hard time because he posted two deals for GWM amongst the other deals he has posted?

      In that vain, you really like Northfolk cleaning supplies. You posted 2 deals on the same day back in January.

      I hope you got a commission from the company for advertising so hard :)

      • +7

        The correct response from @HolyCr4p should now be "touché "

    • -3

      So much China shrilling on OzB now.
      I question the validity of the upvotes.

      • +8

        bruh you have been a member since 2009, by now you should have figured out this site is riddled with goods from china lol.

        • -4

          Not electric vehicles and cheap tickets to China. We're at end game now.

    • They have millions of cyber army to do everything online.

      • -1

        I am on negative points atm for speaking badly about a country I spent 3 months visiting to look at factories and business culture.

  • +23

    I like the way their base model trim level is called premium.

    • +7

      Starbucks fan

    • i prefer to trim everything

    • +3

      I DON'T like the way their base model trim level is called premium.

    • +2

      If it was honestly named the base Toyota would call their first trim “lacking”

    • Must be Australia marketing. Calling crap premium is the norm unfortunately.

    • nothing new, BMW refers to their pov pack as Special Edition (SE) too. They claim that it is a basic spec but with "premium" options/packs. But the stuff on offer is always in line with its contemporaries at that price point.

      and then there's that AMG, M-Sport BS. it's just a base car with nicer rims and maybe body kit (if you're lucky) and that's about it.

  • +11

    I did not enjoy my time with a H6 Premium hire car.

    The 2L turbo goes like stink but the gearbox, steering and suspension all feel like they are designed for completely different cars.

    Having said that, it is a lot of car for the money.

    • +3

      What’s the point of living with a car you don’t enjoy!

      • +6

        poor like me.

        • +3

          Not sure if the following is still valid.

          But you can find decent 1-2 years old used car at a discount price. I got one before Covid at almost 50% off new.

          • +14

            @spc12go: Cool, can we borrow your Time Machine and get one pre-Covid too?

            • +1

              @choofa: Try shop around instead of browsing bargain forum. Things don’t get handed to you

              • +4

                @spc12go: Maybe you don’t know but used cars were cheaper pre-covid and they’ve gone up at least 50% since then. Those who actually have been shopping already know this.

                • @choofa: Have they not come back down to earth yet?

          • @spc12go: used chinese cars right? or one of those old novated lease cars?

            • @dukeGR4: Nope, Lexus Rc350 Sports Luxury. With 26000km on the clock. The paint job wasn’t the best due to machine washing. Hasn’t been in accident at all. Lucky I guess.

      • +26

        Half of the population wouldn't even notice how well or poorly a car drives.

        Sadly, even most Porsche 4WD owners don't appreciate how well engineered their cars are, they just buy it for the badge.

        • +7

          It always amused me, the people that wax lyrical about their "highly engineered" euro cars, when Japanese taxi's are spanking have been spanking pants off them for reliability and longevity since they started making cars.

        • Still can't hide the fact that is a pig on four wheels. no amount of engineering will overcome the law of physics.

        • +8

          Porsche SUVs are just tricked up Audis. The cars are “well engineered” but not for reliability, longevity, ease of maintenance and low costs.

          Porsche cars are all money pits.

          Well engineered cars can do both, performance and reliability.

        • +1

          You don't notice things until they are bad

          Walk into a house, you don't look at the paint job, but if it's bad you definitely notice it, then you spot all the problems.

          I was in a haval the other day for Uber and the suspension felt like it was non existent.

          The owner said he was going to be selling it in the next 3 months, he'd only had it for 1 month!

          • @itshammer: Our friend has had a Jolion for 3 years now and he loves it! Their other car is a Skoda Karoq so he admits whilst the Haval doesn't really hold a candle to the Karoq in terms of ride and handling, it's still great value.

      • If it means you get to live with less debt for your house, better quality food- yeah I'll take the car I don't enjoy.

        I recently paid off my mortgage by selling my car.
        For the last month, life feels good and I've been on a break from work.

        I need a car again by end of July - I am wondering if I just go full 70K out of the offset and by a new Hyundai (or old BMW 2021 5 series). It will take me another 2 years to top up offset. Or if I go full cheap MG3 2021 for $15k.

        • +7

          Why not a used Corolla or i30. Should last longer than the MG and may be worth more when you sell

          • +1

            @spc12go: Totally agree - a hybrid Corolla is an extremely reliable and practical vehicle with very low running costs.

          • @spc12go: I am very used to Android Auto.

            And Adaptive cruise control for city traffic driving - I find I'm less tired or exhausted after a 40 minute drive in 8am traffic with it.

            The cheapest corolla in last 3-4 years is about $25k (even second hand, I like the car to have done <60,000kms).

            MG3 cheapo ones are like 10K cheaper with android auto. Or the brand new one is like 32k.

            Conflicted.

        • Go the MG3. Live life dangerously!!! Exciting!!!

          • @SeanConnery: Lol, what do you think of the new Santa Fe hybrid?

            It's like 78k~.

            My elderly parents will enjoy the middle row. But…. 2-3 years of work again to pay off my mortgage again.

      • Poverty and prioritising debt, i was 48 and on my 10th car before i got to enjoy motoring.

    • +2

      Agree, the transmission is trash and how it drives is too!

      Worst of all is the aggressive and badly calibrated safety features you can't permanently turn off.

      https://www.productreview.com.au/listings/haval-h6-ultra/q-a…

    • +1

      The zero to 100 time was seriously impressive for a 2L SUV.

      • -3

        Viva Xi

        • +4

          Viva Trump

          • +1

            @star-ggg: Make China great again!

            • +2

              @salin: China don't need to do anything. The west is self-destructing with tribalism and political bickering.

      • -1

        best electric cars are made in China, not so sure about ICE - that I would still get from Germans

        • +18

          German cars are crap. I have one and so many issues, should have gotten a toyota.

        • +1

          Take it you’ve never had a VW. Owned 3 problems with everyone. Had a Skoda, same parts but very reliable, go figure…

      • +7

        China made cars will be no.1 in the world.

        including copy the design as well ? LMAO

        • +7

          They don't copy the designs. They figured it's cheaper to just buy the designers!

          https://europe.autonews.com/move/chinese-ev-maker-nio-hires-…

        • +4

          Have you seen the BYD U8? I don't think it's a copy.

        • that's the same thing with Kia and Hyundai really. they just straight up poached ex-big 3 designers and even engineers.

          • +3

            @dukeGR4: It's a really common trajectory.

            In the late 70's and early 80's, Japanese cars were considered poorly made, cheap junk. But by the mid-90's, they were widely considered to be high quality engineers and innovators, and began to compete directly with their European and American counterparts. It took 20 years, but Japanese cars are now everywhere, and very well regarded.

            Then the Koreans came along, entering the market with very cheap cars that were considered cheap garbage. But over the years, they have invested in getting the knowledge and skills to improve their quality, they demonstrated their reliability with best-in-class warranties and highly competive pricing, and now they're right at the forefront of EV development and showing themselves to be excellent innovators. It only took them about 15 years to be considered totally mainstream.

            The Chinese car industry has been making vehicles domestically for many years, but only recently began to expand into global markets. Chinese goods have long had the reputation for being cheap and nasty, disposable rubbish, and Western markets have often dismissed them in the past. But if history is any guide, we should expect them to very rapidly improve their quality while being extremely cost-competitive. They've already been on Australian markets for 3-4 years, and I expect within another couple of years they will have shed their early reputation and have a strong market share, beginning with economical vehicles like the MG3 but also pushing into more luxury markets.

            • @klaw81: your timeline is a decade out, though the 20 years development timeline is broadly correct.
              In the late '50s and early '60s, Japanese cars were considered poor… by the mid-'70s, they were being noticed as more durable and reliable than pretty much anything else available at the time. By the early '80s they were dominating the world… and the number of late-'60s Japanese built cars still on the road was astonishing, at a time when a 10 year old car was trash, you'd get 15-20 yrs from a Toyota, Datsun or mazda.
              Today, that lifetime seemingly has extended, anecdotally there are plenty of Toyotas and mazdas on the road approaching 25+, built pre-Sydney Olympics!!

      • +9

        Make your mind up, you said they are the best then you say they will be. They will never beat Toyota for reliability and will never beat European styling.

        • -3

          That may be true but once they can build disposable cars. Reliability won’t be a concern.

          • +1

            @spc12go: You need to read the room, disposable is on the nose now. People are starting to realise their consumer habits are bad for the environment and contribute to landfill. Look at the awareness of fast fashion lately as an example. We are more likely to be car sharing autonomous vehicles that last than buying disposable vehicles.

            • -1

              @Spendmore: You wish, if that was true there wouldn’t be people flogging to this website. They would be looking at market place for 2nd stuff.
              Furniture shops are popping up everywhere.
              Inflation are out of control
              Don’t mix reality with ideology.

              I wish people would stop been wasteful, look at all the kerbside clean up, the amount of stuff people throw out. Only to be replaced with new.
              People throw away stuff because it no longer matches the decor.

              • +4

                @spc12go: There was a shein pop up that was stopped by petition in Perth recently for this very reason, ideology slowly becoming a reality. You must see the comments on this website referring to stuff as landfill. People dont flock to this site for junk they come here for bargains on stuff like OLED tv's apple laptops, Samsung phones etc. I seriously doubt a disposable car would see the light of day, there would need to be a recycling program set up and would be costly so a cheap car that is disposable cant exist.

                • -1

                  @Spendmore: Try eletric car, too expensive to repair. Then it’s no longer repairable. When the battery pack is damaged, some of them are sealed unit and can’t be repair. Then it becomes disposable car.

                  The same for electronic devices and appliances. There are not laws or rules to dictate the right to repair.

                  Look at Apple fighting the right to repair in the US. It’s a shame what the government allow the lobbyist to get away with.

                  Ideology is just an idea, when profit is in the way it’s hard to become reality

                  • +2

                    @spc12go: Its a bit hard to hide a pile of discarded cars though wouldn't you agree?
                    We do have phone recycling too now, e waste collection etc.

                    • +1

                      @Spendmore: Yes it’s hard to ignore cars but i don’t think it register in most people’s mind. It’s out of sight out of mind.
                      Until a manufacturer is required to deal with their own waste as required by law. Things won’t move fast enough.

                  • -2

                    @spc12go:

                    Try eletric car, too expensive to repair. Then it’s no longer repairable.

                    Hard to argue with that kind of self-justifying statement…..except it's nonsense. Electric cars need less repairs and maintenance than ICE equivalents.

                    When the battery pack is damaged, some of them are sealed unit and can’t be repair. Then it becomes disposable car.

                    Some EV battery packs are indeed sealed and cells sometimes can't be repaired individually. However, (a) that is extremely rare, since battery packs are very well protected from physical damage, and (b) a battery replacement is unlikely to make the car disposable.

                    • @klaw81:

                      that is extremely rare, since battery packs are very well protected from physical damage,

                      So why do many insurance companies write them off if there is a dent on the undertray?

                      a battery replacement is unlikely to make the car disposable.

                      The cost of a pack replacement often makes the car uneconomic to repair. Other than Polestar I don't know of any other manufacturer that will replace individual modules instead of the entire pack.

                      Who was that poor Canadian Iconiq 5 owner again?

                    • @klaw81: All the BYD car battery are sealed unit, you can’t repair the individual cell when they are stuffed.

                      • @spc12go: What about Haval? Can individual cells be repaired on the H6 hybrid?

        • +3

          They can beat European styling. They own European brands (Volvo) and employ European designers.

          It's not really too difficult or expensive.

          • @incipient: Yeah they are quality brands though and are expensive, it will be a different matter at this price point. If you look at the designs ex China that arent copies they are pretty ugly like mahindra or ssangyong.

            • +1

              @Spendmore: Ssangyong and mahindra aren't Chinese. Ssangyong doesn't seem to be seriously competing, and no clue what mahindra is doing. Still trying to get the engineering right back in India?

              China is coming after western manufacturers, which is why they're pushing out western designs to compete in western markets. China is hellbent on mercanalism, which is why they're actively targeting new(ish) markets.

              • @incipient: If they can do volvo styling on chery prices they may well do it. It would be a good thing as other manufacturers would have to drop prices to compete. It was the same with Japanese cars once but the current state of cheap chinese cars arent anywhere near yet.

        • European styling?

          Bro, as someone who has had an CLA45s, Audi S3 in the past, and Porsche Macan…
          Look at the latest BMW 5 series (crap) or the X5 shape which hasn't changed in 10 years, and compare it with the BYD U8 (which is in China).

          100% I'd buy the U8 if it were available here.

          • +5

            @DnA-bargain: Are you serious? I just googled it and it looks like a defender knock off? I rest my case.

            • +1

              @Spendmore: The interior looks much nicer.
              Looks way better than any Land Rover (Tata Motors) car.
              The whole car looks nicer.

              • -1

                @DnA-bargain: Nah man it looks tacky AF, the front is a patrol copy too and it has wierd bits of trim all over the body. A defender has subtle styling these guys cant match even when directly copying. The closest is the taycan copy the new xiaomi car which looks great but is almost identical to the porsche. This U8 is more landwind vs evoque.

              • @DnA-bargain: Nope, that interior is another BYD fail.

          • @DnA-bargain: the latest M5 probably weighs more than the U8 lmao, 2.4 tonnes.

        • +2

          and will never beat European styling

          BMW isn't doing Euro styling any favours…

          • +1

            @smartazz104: Yeah the new grill isnt great but looks ok on the I7. I guess my point is unless they have European stylists helping they look cheesy or they copy which often looks cheesy too. When they get it right like volvo etc the cost is higher so cant compete in this budget price range.

        • @Spendmore So you're saying European cars are bad in reliability? AND Jap cars are ugly?
          I guess you can't get a reliable car with good styling by the sound. Do you buy cars based on styling as you sounds a Euro car fan?
          PS. Styling is personal, I won't judge your judgement.

          • -2

            @Jamesx: No jap cars are great but you must be ignorant to not know European styling is regarded amongst the best. I would chose a toyota every time.
            PS. I dont care 😘

      • +2

        No. They will be the cheapest cars in the world. Not the best. Get what you pay for.

    • +1

      actually quite the opposite. they really can't compete against the other major players in mainland China. their ass was kicked hard by BYD etc..

      but their price was actually OK here in Australia, so that's a plus

  • +3

    Tesla's will have half price sale soon .

    • +15

      Keep offering 2 candles each night. Prayers will be heard soon

    • -2

      Have to wait for the Xpeng G6 to be released

      • Xpeng - name of the company owner, not for me

        • -1

          Irrespective, it will be price similarly to the Model Y, putting pressure on Tesla to continue to discount.

  • -1

    this deal is one which is less irrelevant

  • +11

    Doesn't seem that long ago that the annual EOFY car runouts didn't rate a mention on Ozbargain.. now every car gets it's own special little post…

    • -1

      i hope they get a little of commision for advertising the cars here (evil laugh)

    • -2

      A lot of Chinese cars on here now…

      • -1

        and 50 centers

  • can they bring a phev here yet…

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