Free 10 Years Extended Warranty on XPENG G6 Parts & Battery (Valued at $4,980) @ XPENG

2010

One of China's best EV brands has re-launched their extended warranty promo in Australia. I think only MG is the other manufacturer to offer 10 years. Tesla offer a measily 4 on theirs (8 for battery).

If you're a high income PAYG earner get it on a self managed novated lease (source own finance) for maxiumum bang for buck.

e.g. Maxxia

Pinched the description below from tempting

Also, offer will be backdated for anyone who placed an order from 1 February 2025.

Complimentary 10-Year Extended Warranty

Place an order on the XPENG G6 between 1 Feb 2025 and 30 Jun 2025 to be eligible to receive complimentary 10-Year Extended Warranty valued at up to $4,980 (inc. GST).

What you will get:

• A 5-year manufacturer’s warranty.
• An additional 5-year extended warranty on car parts at no extra cost. Valued at $2,990
• An 8-year manufacturer’s warranty on the battery with an optional 2-year extension, totalling 10 years for battery parts valued at $1,990

Offer Details

Extended Warranty: Eligible customers will receive a complimentary extended warranty for up to 10 years, which includes:

  • A 5-year manufacturer’s warranty.
  • An additional 5-year extended warranty on car parts at no extra cost. Valued at $2,990.
  • An 8-year manufacturer’s warranty on the battery with an optional 2-year extension, totalling 10 years for battery parts valued at $1,990

XPENG G6
Standard Range (435 km WLTP, 66kWh LFP Battery)
$54,800 + On-Road Costs

State Drive Away Price
ACT $55,809.40
NSW $57,912
NT $55,590.30
QLD $56,679.35
SA $57,646.11
TAS $57,628.42
VIC $57,990.05
WA $59,381.15

Long Range (570 km WLTP, 87.5 kWh NCM Battery)
$59,800 + On-Road Costs

State Drive Away Price
ACT $60,809.40
NSW $63,162
NT $60,740.30
QLD $61,779.35
SA $62,846.11
TAS $62,828.42
VIC $63,200.05
WA $64,733.75

Related Stores

XPENG Australia
XPENG Australia

Comments

    • Thats what Kodak said…

  • +2

    I knew Chinese copy car designs, but is it only me who thinks that their website is similar to Tesla's?

    • It doesn’t. It does however look like every other Virtualyard site.

    • if you're going to buy a chinese car… Does it even matter at that point

    • +2

      They copy everything, Temu will have this on sale once you hit the secret gift at roullete

  • What's the insurance like on a G6 vs a Tesla?

    • Depends, are they racing on the street or on the track?

  • +2

    Good luck trying to claim warranty for anything…

    • +1

      why? you got yourself a holden and all of a sudden your american friends ditch the national car for something else?

  • -4

    I’ll be charging this car every 20 mins after 10 years

  • +2

    10 year warranty on an ev that majority will move off of is a smart scam

    Rather have something more tangible like 4k off or charging voucher

  • +1

    Unless the extended warranty includes fitment of said parts, the warranty could leave the consumer exposed to unreasonable labor costs.

    What happens in cases whereby the cause isn’t known, or the replacement part doesn't resolve the issue. A rattle, a squeak, something attributed to one part, which turns out its other parts, or multiple parts. Does the owner keep forking the labor portion until its resolved?

    XPENG have partnered with Ultra Tune, and depending on the tech working on the car, they could be unfamiliar with the vehicle. This could result in misdiagnoses, or a slower repair time……which won't bother Ultra Tune/XPENG too much as they are not paying the labor bill.

    I would really like to see the importer invest in after-sales, a service network, not just an agreement with a service center. I guess once the volume is there, they will.

    • they are covering 'parts' up to $3k after 5yrs

      thats bullshit

      move on… TrueEV are trying it on with the well regarded aussie consumer

      • +1

        I'm not sure if that's the case, you pay extra for the extended warranty, $2,990 (or free as part of this promo), but I don't believe the warranty is limited/capped based on total spend on parts over that period.

        In any case pushing for 10 years is reassuring, we just need it bumper-to-bumper without an exhaustive list of what is not covered, noises, rattles, handles, trim, real consumables, (XPENG's definition seems very reasonable), not made-up consumables that really shouldn't be failing within 10 years, mounts, water pumps, these types of things.

        I'd stick with a BYD, SIAC, or Geely if I were looking for a Chinese EV. But a bit of competition should help us all especially if the big players follow suit and have less restrictions around it (other than time/millage)

      • they are covering 'parts' up to $3k after 5yrs

        no thats what they value the warranty at if you take it out.

        Parts will still be in line with the first 5 years - as in if its not meant to break and it breaks its covered no matter the cost.

    • +2
      • +1

        Interesting, but I don't think these posts represent all the Ultra Tune franchisees.

        You may get complete d**ks or people that genuinely want to assist. But really who wants to deal with this crap.

        My EV is doing zyx, drive it to the dealer, under warranty let me know when to pick it up. No reading FB/Google reviews on where is the most experienced Ultra Tune with EV knowledge is, no hoping the tech you wanted is not some new guy that’s never worked on a XPENG before….get your own service center XPENG, you own team, and expand from there….at least in the main cities.

  • +1

    @ozisaver how much is considered high income PAYG earner?

    • +1

      One in the top tax bracket where lease payments are pre tax (45c to the dollar as tax above $180k)

      • +1

        Doesn't even need to be that high to win with an EV on a novated lease. If you turn cars over and enjoy stable employment go for it regardless.

  • Is that unlimited km?

    • 220,000km

  • +3

    Are they gonna be around in 10 years?

  • errrrr no

    you made a compelling case, yet my verdict still stands

    if I wanted an ev in this price range while being nauseated by interior design beyond description, I would choose Tesla. or polestar for half decent interior and driving experience

  • +3

    How does one set up a self-managed novated lease? I’ve seen them mentioned a few times on OzBargain but can’t find any info on the process.

    • Following

      • Following

    • You simply call your bank to see if they offer it

      • So do I:
        1. Call bank and ask if they offer a novated lease product (as opposed to a standard car loan)
        2. If yes and interest rate is OK, sign contract with bank
        3. Call novated lease company (that my employer approves of) and say ‘I’ve already got finance, how much will you charge to manage everything else for me’?

    • Well it wouldn't work and if it did your employer wouldn't really let you

      I will explain

      So are are only a limited amount of financiers out there that would deal with non novated lease companies. So first you need find one of those if you are lucky.

      Then you need to do up a 3 party novation agreement that the financier is happy with or maybe they got one for you which you, employer and financier will sign

      Then you need to setup a salary sacrifice agreement and budget your expenses

      Tell your employer to to take out x pre-tax and then do your own fringe benefits tax reports GST reports

      That's one the true self-managed NL

      BUT the term self-managed isn't really self managed it's still managed in-house by your employer if they have the expertise or they will pick a novated lease provider. The term self-managed is that you can choose your place of service, maintenance tyres, cleaning etc vs fully-maintained where the NL may force you to use their list of providers which can be costly. End of the day if you are just a regular person working for a regular company then the company will outsource to a novated lease company which will provide you with a self-maintain novated lease but you don't really self maintain it.. you just have a choice of where you get things done to the car.

  • Will they be around after 5yrs though? They've only had a 10yr history.

  • -1

    Ngl but i can't stand the look of these, basically a Mazda 3 but slightly bigger.
    The Deepal on the otherhand looks the goods.

    Good on them for standing by their product.
    Cue the "ChINA CaR BaD"
    Sure but you get 10 years of warranty - if that's not reassurance i don't know what is.

    • -1

      but you get 10 years of warranty - if that's not reassurance i don't know what is.

      You obviously have no idea how worthless a warranty can be.

      • -1

        Some people are never satisfied…

        • -2

          I'll be satisfied when the company who is selling me a $50k+ machine has been around longer than 5 minutes. It's basic due diligence.
          Toyota or Mercedes didn't get their reputations overnight, it took decades to earn it. Kia/Hyundai is a great example, they've been here 40 years but it's really only in the last 10-15 or so that they have now earned a reputation for being a decent brand. So any new player Chinese or not will have to earn their stripes the same way.

  • -1

    wait for Geely EX5

  • +1

    Seriously tho, why do all Electric cars have vegan friendly fake leather seats. Why can’t I get real leather!!!

    • +1

      Cost.

      • +2

        Should be a option

        • -2

          You have the option of riding on a cow

    • not just EVs. all makes. BMW and Merc etc are all doing pleather on some models

  • test drove this the other day. quite flashy, aimed to be a tesla copy. the quality of material/interior is better than tesla, and has a screen in front of steering wheel. but don't like the styling, and uncertainty of Xpeng's viability is a drawback - even Nio is broke. the only ones I'd say are "safe" are BYD, Geely and maybe MG

    • -1

      Nio is broke because they’re blowing money on silly battery swapping.

      • I can see how they almost made it work in China.. can never take off here

  • Doesn’t come with basic home charge cable. Xpeng promises to send, but never arrives. Caution.

    • +1

      No cable no buy then see how quickly the dealer gets a cable

  • No glove box
    No sale

  • Outrageous that Tesla only offer 4 years or 80,000km for their cars.

    Xpeng extended warranty pricing isn’t that outrageous to begin with, especially if leasing.

    Longer warranties also help consumer confidence in the brand and aid in resale.

    • Tesla does offer 8 years on the battery and drive train warranty.

      • Yes, but only 4 years or 80,000km on the rest of the car.

  • +3

    Maxxia is rubbish and a rip off

  • +1

    Imagine paying for what you're freely entitled to under the ACL

    • @sareth - ACL is still not clear when it comes to batteries, as they can be treated as a consumer item. Same with life span for car parts.

      Most retailers also make it an absolute pain for you to try and enforce your ACL rights.

  • +1

    It ironic that some people here shitting on this car while driving a shitbox yaris or any other old car that doesn't have at least a wired carplay.

  • Ah! Solve this. Part availability is not related warranty or extended warranty. Check Reddit, YouTube, deepseek, ChatGPT or whatever, they(all chinese except for great wall)seem to produce new models and lineups every 1-2 years and parts availability warranty or now is always a problem.

  • What's the dollar amount corresponding to "high income PAYG earner" ?

    What if you have your own business?

    • You get maximum benefit if you’re in top tax bracket. Eg you earn $200k pa and Say the car cost $10k per year you would get a 47% tax benefit on that amount.

      But If you earn $100k pa the tax saving benefit would be 30% .

      Must be a salaried employee or if own a business be setup as as company that pays yourself a salary. Cannot be a sole trader.

      Polls indicate most ozbargainers earn $200k + so should be suitable for most people 🤣

      • I'm going to try and explain it in a way most people will find clearer.

        1. Eligibility and Tax Context:
          This example applies to those earning $190,001 or more, Australia’s highest tax bracket at 45%.
          No Fringe Benefits Tax (FBT) is payable because the electric vehicle is below the Luxury Car Tax (LCT) threshold for an EV.

        2. Total Cost When Self-Managed:
          Vehicle Price: The NSW driveaway price for the long-range XPENG G6 is A$63,162.
          Maintenance: Car maintenance costs are estimated at A$10,000 per year.
          Over 3 Years: Total cost = A$63,162 + (3 × A$10,000) = A$93,162.

        3. Tax Savings with a Novated Lease:
          With a 45% marginal tax rate, you save 45% of the total expenditure.
          Calculation: A$93,162 × 45% ≈ A$41,923 in tax savings over 3 years.

        4. Effective Net Cost:
          After tax savings: A$93,162 − A$41,923 ≈ A$51,239 over 3 years.

        By choosing a novated lease, a high-income earner can reduce the effective cost of the car (including maintenance) from A$93,162 to roughly A$51,239 over three years, saving about A$41,923 in tax.

        • How do you get $10000 maintenance cost per year?

          • @mlin7728: Substitute with your own number. It's supposed to be the cost of ownership.

            It's meant to cover all operational costs like car servicing, parts, tyres, insurance, registration etc

  • +1

    Anyone know the best (lowest comparison finance for Ev or PHEV ? What’s maxxia

  • How is it compared with BYD? I thought BYD is better.

  • Has been fixing AC issue for 2 car in a month. Dont buy this one.

    • first one is the ac valve leaking refrigerant. second one was the ac compressor malfunctioning.

    • Both cars are under 1k odo.

      • That’s disappointing to hear. Are you going through ultratune?

        • No, I am the guy who fixing it.

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