Skip advert
Advertisement
Road tests

New Chery QQ3 2026 review: trails European rivals in almost every way

The Chery QQ3 is intended to take on the Ford Puma, but it needs a lot of improvement before it comes to the UK

Find your next car here
Compare deals from trusted partners on this car and previous models.
Or are you looking to sell your car?
Value my car
Fast, no-nonsense car selling
Value my car

Verdict

Chery’s QQ3 is ideally placed to be a high seller due to its spacious cabin, good levels of standard kit and reasonable range. However, it will need to be priced well below similarly sized rivals such as the Renault 4 and Ford Puma Gen-E to appeal to UK buyers, as it’s nowhere near as polished as its European competition in almost all areas. Let’s see if any changes are made before it arrives in showrooms here.

Advertisement - Article continues below

If the desired effect is to dispel the notion that ‘Chinese cars don’t have to be cheap’, the Chery QQ3 didn’t get the message. The QQ3 is a B-segment SUV-sized electric model that could rival the Renault 4 and Ford Puma Gen-E. However, where you’ll need to spend close to £24,000 for either of those (even with the UK Government’s generous Electric Car Grant), the Chery is priced from just £7,500!

There is a caveat or two to this figure, of course, because that’s how much it costs in its home market for the entry-level variant. Even in China, it is a simple, low-cost car, but upgrade the battery size to something more akin to what you will find in European rivals, and it’s more like £9,000 – still a relative bargain. This is not a pointer as to how much it might cost when it reaches the UK next year, though. That figure we’ll have to wait for.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Used - available now

208

2015 Peugeot

208

55,000 milesManualPetrol1.2L

Cash £4,090
View 208
C-Class Saloon

2015 Mercedes

C-Class Saloon

94,000 milesAutomaticDiesel1.6L

Cash £8,250
View C-Class Saloon
Leon

2018 SEAT

Leon

80,100 milesAutomaticPetrol1.4L

Cash £9,990
View Leon
5-Door Hatch

2018 MINI

5-Door Hatch

66,000 milesManualPetrol1.5L

Cash £7,150
View 5-Door Hatch

We drove a higher-specification model, having been told that under the skin is a 41kWh battery pack powering a front-mounted e-motor with around 120bhp. These figures are bang-on that of the smaller-batteried Renault 4, and the two aren’t miles apart in terms of range, either. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

Chery quotes around 250 miles on the old-school NEDC cycle, so accounting for the variations of the WLTP regulations, we should see this figure hit around 210-220 miles – comparable once again to the R4 and Puma. DC charging isn’t a strong suit at 85kW, and Chery quotes a 30-80 per cent top-up taking 16.5 minutes. 

Step inside the cabin and initial impressions are positive. There’s plenty of visibility thanks to a large windscreen and front windows, and the technology suite is typically strong. The main touchscreen is both responsive and has a decent user interface. 

Switchgear is at a premium, but there are a few physical controls both on the centre console and steering wheel which make essential tasks easy enough to execute. The small driver’s display is a bonus, but its low-resolution graphics aren’t that much to get excited about. 

Look past the padded section of contrasting material on the dashboard, and the rest of the cabin is pretty uninspiring. The plastics across the main dash, console and doors are all quite thin and don’t feel especially robust. This is an inexpensive car, but many of the cheapest new models no longer feel it. It’s a trick that some other low-cost brands, such as Dacia, have figured out. 

Advertisement - Article continues below
Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Rear space, on the other hand, is outstanding. The flat floor and wide bench will easily swallow three adults, and the boxy exterior unlocks plenty of headroom, too. The boot is also pretty big, although it’s not dramatically larger than the competition at 375 litres. There is also a very well packaged under-bonnet frunk with an additional 70 litres of space. Compared to the Renault 4, this is a much more versatile car, although the Puma’s clever variable boot floor does have its own merits. 

It would be generous to call it inoffensive to drive, though, as it’s very clear the money’s been spent elsewhere. Almost all of the key controls – the steering, throttle and brakes – feel like they need work in their calibration. 

Despite being a relatively light EV, the gloopy steering and stodgy suspension make the car feel about a tonne heavier than it actually is. The throttle pedal also needs work. In anything other than the QQ3’s ‘low’ regenerative braking mode, it can be tricky to drive the car smoothly. This means you’ll need to rely on the brake pedal more than you do in other BEVs, and this is little better as it’s also spongey and lacks feel. 

Advertisement - Article continues below
Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Ride comfort and general refinement are underwhelming. Wind noise is pretty noticeable, and even on relatively small 17-inch wheels, there’s rudimentary feel to the damping that creates the impression the QQ3 is working extremely hard just to keep all four wheels on the ground. A Renault 4 is no Clio RS, but it feels far more resolved and refined than the Chery. 

Our drive on Chinese roads did little to inspire confidence that the car will fare any better in the UK. The smooth highways we drove on were not generally representative of the type we get across the UK, and how it deals with fast A or B-roads will be a much bigger challenge.  

Chery will need to put some time and money into improving the drive, plus the interior plastics, before it could be considered a serious rival against European and forthcoming Korean alternatives. Unless, of course, it is seriously discounted. At under £18,000, we’d consider it to be a potential, if not especially compelling, option for the money. Anything above that and it becomes less tenable in its current form.

Model:Chery QQ 3
Price:£9,000 (in China)/TBC (UK)
On sale:2027 (UK)
Powertrain:42.7kWh battery, 1x e-motor
Power/torque:121bhp/N/A
0-62mph/top-speedN/A
Range:249 miles (NEDC)
Max. charging:85kW DC charging, 30-80 per cent in 16.5 mins
Size (L/W/H):4,195/1,811/1,569mm
Skip advert
Advertisement

More reviews

Senior staff writer

News editor at Auto Express, Jordan joined the team after six years at evo magazine where he specialised in news and reviews of cars at the high performance end of the car market. 

New & used car deals

Skoda Kodiaq

Skoda Kodiaq

RRP £39,045Avg. savings £4,255 off RRP*Used from £11,195
Nissan Qashqai

Nissan Qashqai

RRP £27,435Avg. savings £5,965 off RRP*Used from £9,990
Nissan Juke

Nissan Juke

RRP £19,805Avg. savings £4,626 off RRP*Used from £8,695
MG MG4

MG MG4

RRP £27,005Avg. savings £6,250 off RRP*Used from £9,790
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

New Jaguar GT: Groundbreaking 1,000bhp, four-door EV to be named in days
Jaguar GT - front (exclusive image)

New Jaguar GT: Groundbreaking 1,000bhp, four-door EV to be named in days

Jaguar’s electric GT has been called many things during development, but it’s rumoured its official nameplate is set to be confirmed next week, alongs…
News
7 May 2026
New Cupra Raval 2026 review: a true pocket rocket for the EV era
Cupra Raval - front tracking

New Cupra Raval 2026 review: a true pocket rocket for the EV era

The hot little Raval marks the beginning of a very promising new era
Road tests
8 May 2026
Renault 5 gets one-pedal driving for its first birthday
Renault 5 E-Tech Iconic Five - front action

Renault 5 gets one-pedal driving for its first birthday

The funky French EV was the UK’s most popular electric car in April and has upped its game with one-pedal driving
News
7 May 2026