Skip advert
Advertisement
In-depth reviews

Jaecoo 7 review

Latest Chinese arrival aims to deliver upmarket space at a competitive price

Overall Auto Express rating

3.0

How we review cars
RRP
£29,435 £35,055
Avg. savings
£2,274 off RRP*
Pros
  • Generous standard equipment
  • Plenty of interior space
  • Long warranty
Cons
  • Thirsty petrol engine
  • Poor automatic gearbox
  • Fidgety ride
Find your Jaecoo 7
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

Our opinion on the Jaecoo 7

Jaecoo will be an unfamiliar name to most UK buyers, but it’s part of a Chinese group which, worldwide at least, is much better known. Jaecoo is a sub-division of Chery and was created as an SUV maker for export markets. Chery also owns the Omoda brand, which is another recent newcomer to Britain. Indeed, the Jaecoo 7 and Omoda 5 share the same platform.

Advertisement - Article continues below

In both instances, loads of kit is provided as standard, but unlike Omoda, Jaecoo is pitched with a little more upmarket intent. That’s evident in the styling; the imposing front grille is hardly shy or retiring, while other areas – particularly at the back – have more than a hint of the Range Rover Velar. This all comes at a price that pits this medium-sized SUV against smaller models from European and Far Eastern rivals.

Key specs 
Fuel typePetrol and plug-in hybrid
Body styleSmall SUV
Powertrain1.6-litre, 4cyl petrol, front-wheel drive
1.6-litre, 4cyl petrol, four-wheel drive
1.5-litre, 4cyl petrol plus 1x e-motor and 18.3kWh battery, front-wheel drive
Safety5 stars (Euro NCAP, 2025, applies to the PHEV version tested)
WarrantyUp to seven years/100,000 miles

About the Jaecoo 7

Prices for the Jaecoo 7 range from just over £30,000 and rise to a little over £35,000, although there are discounts to be found with our Find a Car service. For the money, you get a car from one of the wave of Chinese brands that are landing in the UK, and it’s one which is priced at the level of a small SUV, but similar in size to mid-size models.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Jaecoo is a brand owned by Chery, which is China’s biggest car exporter, and has been for the past 20 years or so. In 2024, it sold more than 2.6 million cars, which is more than the BMW Group managed to shift. 

While Chery also owns Omoda, that brand is designed with affordable luxury in mind, while Jaecoo is meant to be seen as the generally more premium marque. The Jaecoo 7 has a more rugged aesthetic and is attempting to go after the likes of the Audi Q3, BMW X1 and MINI Countryman. However, we doubt Jaecoo can steal sales away from those particular models at this early stage. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

There are just three variants to choose from. The base model features a 1.6-litre petrol engine and seven-speed automatic gearbox, and comes in Deluxe trim, which features a 13.2-inch central touchscreen, 10.25-inch digital driver’s display, wireless smartphone charging, a surround camera system, heated front seats, LED ambient lighting, a full-length panoramic sunroof and more than 20 advanced driver-assistance systems.

For around £4,000 extra, you can upgrade to Luxury specification, which has the same engine and gearbox combo, but also adds four-wheel drive. Inside there’s a slightly larger 14.8-inch touchscreen, a head-up display, an eight-speaker Sony sound system, ventilated front seats, a heated steering wheel, heated rear seats and a four-way adjustable driver’s seat, among other kit.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

The plug-in hybrid Jaecoo 7 SHS (Super Hybrid System) is only available in Luxury trim, and features a 1.5-litre petrol engine that works with an electric motor and 18.3kWh battery to deliver up to a claimed 403mpg and 56 miles of pure-electric driving.

Performance & driving experience

The Jaecoo 7 isn’t as polished as many better known rivals, although it’s safe and predictable
Jaecoo 7 - rear cornering
ProsCons
  • The plug-in hybrid brings a welcome boost in performance
  • Light steering helps when parking
  • The surround view camera provides a view underneath the car to avoid obstacles
  • Laggy automatic gearbox
  • Adding four-wheel drive blunts the performance of the petrol version even further
  • Unsophisticated ride and handling

Slightly dull handling isn’t the end of the world, but elsewhere the Jaecoo 7 trails most rivals for sophistication. At low speeds around town, the ride can be a touch fidgety, but the petrol model isn’t quite as bouncy as the heavier plug-in hybrid. The steering is very light, which makes parking fairly easy, with low-speed manoeuvres aided by the surround-view camera. This includes a system that can provide images of the road beneath the wheels, so you know how close they are to kerbs and other obstacles.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Keen handling isn’t the most important consideration for a family car, and in this respect, the Jaecoo is just about adequate. Aside from the lifeless steering and the body getting thrown around by mid-bend bumps, it’s a fairly neutral and predictable – if slightly sluggish – car to drive through corners. But it’s the ride that is the major issue. The car has a fairly regular bounce at higher speeds, and shocks are transferred into the cabin more noticeably than in other rivals.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Having a long seventh gear is normally a good thing for motorway work, because it means at a cruise the engine revs drop low, both improving refinement and reducing fuel consumption. There is a trade-off when a car is short of performance, though, and that’s certainly the case with the Jaecoo 7. 

At 70mph, the engine settles down to a fairly hushed 2,000rpm in seventh gear, but whenever you need any throttle – such as on an incline – the gearbox will kick down to sixth to maintain its speed, only to shift up again too early, which in turn forces it to kick down and repeat a rather frustrating process. On steeper inclines, it occasionally drops down to fifth gear, so progress isn’t very smooth as a result. It’s a bit of a shame, because road noise and engine noise are as muted as in most other similarly priced petrol-powered cars.

Ellis Hyde driving the Jaecoo 7

Performance, 0-60mph acceleration and top speed

The cheapest model in the range is equipped with a 1.6-litre turbocharged petrol engine, which makes 145bhp and 275Nm of torque. Switch the engine on, and it sounds a little noisy at idle. It’s also loud on other occasions, but these aren’t always its own doing; instead, it’s the fault of the seven-speed automatic gearbox. The laggy transmission is lethargic when moving off from rest, and makes the four-cylinder petrol unit groan as it pulls away. You can take manual control of the shifts, but doing so doesn’t improve things.

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

Given its claimed power figures, the Jaecoo 7 never feels as lively as you might expect. A Volkswagen Group car with a 1.5 TSI petrol engine offers similar power and torque stats, but feels quicker – even in models that match the Jaecoo’s size.

The 7 is available with four-wheel drive, but this will be a tough model for most buyers to justify. The extra driven wheels blunt performance even more: the 0-62mph time increases by 1.5 seconds to 11.8 seconds, and CO2 emissions rise from 169g/km to 182g/km. It also costs around £3,500 more than the front-wheel-drive version, although it does get more standard kit.

The plug-in hybrid version offers much better straight-line speed than the standard petrol model. Thanks to its 18.3kWh battery, the PHEV can cover an impressive 56 miles in electric-only mode, based on WLTP data. The engine doesn’t cut in too often, and when the battery level drops low, the engine fires up to recharge it.

Model Power0-62mphTop speed
Jaecoo 7 1.6T Deluxe145bhp10.3 seconds112mph
Jaecoo 7 1.6T Luxury AWD145bhp11.8 seconds112mph
Jaecoo 7 1.5 PHEV Luxury201bhp6.1 seconds108mph

MPG, emissions and running costs

Thirsty petrol engine undoes some of the benefits of the Jaecoo 7’s relatively low list price
Jaecoo 7 - side
ProsCons
  • The impressive electric range of the plug-in hybrid 
  • Respectable residual values compared with rivals
  • The regular petrol falls into a reasonable insurance group
  • The fuel economy of the petrol-only version is easily beaten by its rivals
  • The fuel economy gauge only shows the results of the previous 31 miles
  • A DC top-up charge still takes 40 minutes

For all of the engine’s issues, by far the worst problem with the pure petrol-powered Jaecoo 7 is its fuel consumption. Over the course of 300 miles or so, we averaged just over 27mpg, which is a figure that would leave us underwhelmed in a performance car with more than double the power – never mind a model where running costs should be a priority. 

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

The absolute best we recorded on any trip was 44mpg, but that was through a 50mph average speed section of motorway. Up the ante to 60mph or 70mph, and you’re looking at mid-to-high 30s mpg – or roughly the same as the 37.7mpg that the Jaecoo 7 can achieve in combined WLTP testing. On a similarly gentle motorway run, a Skoda Kamiq 1.5 TSI is capable of more than 50mpg – and provides stronger performance.

When equipped with a petrol engine, the Jaecoo 7 is going to make the most sense for private buyers. At 169g/km of CO2, the front-wheel-drive petrol 7 faces a first-year VED rate of £1,360. Given that the initial cost is usually swallowed up by a monthly payment of a finance deal, it’s not the end of the world. More relevant is the second-year cost, which comes to £195.

The all-wheel-drive model falls into a lower insurance group than the front-wheel-drive variant, with the pair in groups 21 and 22, respectively. The plug-in hybrid, meanwhile, is in group 31.

Initial estimates suggest that the Jaecoo 7 will deliver residual values that are competitive with its rivals. After three years or 36,000 miles, the base petrol model is predicted to hold on to 48.5 per cent of its original value. Against new cars costing a similar amount, the Jaecoo 7 will have better residuals than a Nissan Juke, similar to a Ford Puma and lie slightly behind a Renault Captur.

Model MPGCO2Insurance group
Jaecoo 7 1.6T Deluxe37.7mpg169g/km21
Jaecoo 7 1.6T Luxury AWD35.3mpg182g/km22

Electric range, battery life and charge time

For the plug-in hybrid model, Jaecoo has designed the powertrain to never let its 18.3kWh battery run flat. Of course, it achieves this by having the engine generate energy, but it means you’ve always got juice in the battery for running in EV mode, such as through town. According to the brand, you should be able to cover 745 miles on a full battery and a single tank of petrol.

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

However, even if the Jaecoo 7 SHS was as efficient as the brand claimed, you might never realise this because the car only shows how it has performed over the previous 50km (31 miles). 

If you want to make the most of the EV driving capabilities, fully recharging the Jaecoo 7 SHS using a standard home wallbox takes nearly seven hours. It can be plugged into a public DC rapid charger, but these are much more expensive and with a maximum charging speed of 40kW, a 30 to 80 per cent top-up still takes 40 minutes.

Model Battery sizeRangeInsurance group
Jaecoo 7 1.5 PHEV Luxury18.3kWh56 miles31

Design, interior & technology

The Jaecoo 7 offers imposing looks and a minimalist cabin, which have clearly been inspired by the latest Range Rover models
Jaecoo 7 - dash
ProsCons
  • A generous amount of standard equipment
  • Smart styling
  • Interior quality feels on-par with similarly priced rivals
  • The interior is mostly touchscreen-based
  • The infotainment is frustrating to use
  • Distracting ambient lighting

While some Chinese newcomers, including its Chery group stablemate, the Omoda 5, look a little anonymous, the Jaecoo has some features that help it stand out from the crowd. To either side of that huge front grille lie headlights with square LED elements, which look almost Audi-like.

Elsewhere, there’s clearly a lot of Range Rover influence, even down to small details such as the electrically retractable door handles. One thing that lets the side down are the 19-inch alloy rims, though, which make the 7 look rather ‘under-wheeled’.

The Land Rover design inspiration continues inside. The steering wheel’s squared-off central boss and chunky spokes have more than a whiff of Evoque about them, while the metal-effect door pulls with exposed screw heads remind us of the Land Rover Defender. The overall dash design is fairly minimalist, but too much so – there are very few physical switches for useful features such as climate control or even a rear window heater. A huge panoramic sunroof helps to make the cabin feel light and airy, though.

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

If you stick with the petrol engine, the dashboard features an oversized gear selector that looks like a spare part from a Transformer, a large drive-mode dial and some physical shortcut buttons. The plug-in Jaecoo 7 SHS has a column-mounted gear selector and a row of buttons for the hybrid powertrain on the centre console. Soft-touch plastics help to give an impression of reasonable perceived quality at first glance, and overall, it feels on a par with other cars available for similar cash. 

One of the Jaecoo’s key strengths is its generous standard kit. Every model gets 19-inch alloy wheels, LED headlights, a 10.25-inch instrument cluster, satellite navigation, synthetic leather upholstery and heated seats. Upgrade to the Luxury trim (available on four-wheel-drive petrols and the PHEV) and you gain an eight-speaker Sony sound system, ventilated front seats and heated rear seats, a head-up display and a heated steering wheel.

There is some oddness to the in-car interfaces, though. When you change drive modes, for example, the in-car assistant will tell you so; switching to Sport will cause a voice to announce “Sport Mode!”. It’s a charming quirk initially, but we suspect that it would become a bit irritating after a while. The digital driver’s display, meanwhile, looks sharp, but its information is haphazardly scattered across its screen.

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

Many cars have ambient lighting, and the Jaecoo 7 is no exception. You can select from a range of colours to personalise the gentle hue that glows from several places on the doors and the dash. 

Less conventional is a feature which makes the ambient lighting flash with the music. We use ‘with’ in the loosest sense – when we tried it, it didn’t really seem to keep time to the rhythm, but flashed on and off and changed colours at random. This is every bit as distracting as you might think.

Jaecoo 7 - screen

Sat-nav, stereo and infotainment

The base petrol Jaecoo 7 is equipped with a 13.2-inch screen, slightly down on the 14.8-inch display in the four-wheel-drive and PHEV versions. As with the larger option, it’s a little frustrating to use. While the screen is fairly responsive and the loading times are okay, the interface isn’t so great. 

Small icons on the home page don’t make the most of the large display, and when pairing Android Auto or Apple CarPlay, the native controls disappear completely. That includes the heating, which can only be adjusted through the screen, so you have to get out of your smartphone system back to the home screen to adjust the temperature, for example.

Boot space, comfort & practicality

The Jaecoo 7 is a big car for the money, although the packaging could be better
Jaecoo 7 - boot
ProsCons
  • Plenty of interior space
  • There’s a high driving position that makes you feel like you’re driving an SUV
  • A large 500-litre boot
  • Narrow back window impacts rear visibility
  • The hard central rear seat back rest won’t be comfortable on long trips
  • The Skoda Kamiq offers similar rear seat space in a considerably smaller package

The Jaecoo 7 is a large car for the money, and those generous exterior proportions translate into lots of space inside. But some smaller B-segment cars run it close for cabin capacity, and take up less space on the road.

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

A high driving position and a decent range of adjustment for the seats and steering wheel are plus points, but the driving position feels a touch offset, with your feet a little further to the right than seems natural. Comfortable headrests are very wide and gently curved, which, as with some of the exterior styling, feels inspired by certain Range Rover products. Less impressive is the view out of the back; the rear window is tiny.

Storage space isn’t in short supply, with the Jaecoo offering a deep and cooled central bin between the front seats. Ahead of that, there is space for two smartphones (one spot has cooled wireless charging) on a raised centre console. Below this is a large storage area. The door bins are wide but a little shallow, yet the glovebox is reasonably roomy. There’s even a small shelf to store a tissue box, and a small slot above it works as a tissue dispenser.

If you regularly need to carry four or more tall people, the Jaecoo is very hard to knock. Compared with most of its similarly priced competition, the 7 has acres of space in the back, mixing an impressive amount of headroom and legroom. The cabin also feels wide enough to accommodate three people without much trouble, but the backrest of the centre seat is extremely hard, so it won’t be as comfortable, unlike the outer seats, which are soft and supportive. 

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

Big doors and ISOFIX points that are easy to access behind large, plastic covers should make it fairly easy to install a child seat in the back. The only criticism is that, considering how much larger on the outside it is than some B-segment rivals such as the Skoda Kamiq, the Jaecoo 7 is not vastly more spacious for occupants.

Dimensions 
Length4,500mm
Width1,865mm
Height1,680mm
Number of seats5
Boot space412-1,335 litres

Dimensions and size

The Jaecoo 7 is longer, taller and wider than cars like the MINI Countryman, Nissan Qashqai and Toyota C-HR. It’s similar in length and width to the Hyundai Tucson and Kia Sportage, although the 7 is still taller than both of those rivals.

Boot space

A 500-litre boot is very spacious when compared with cars of a similar price. Access is via a standard powered tailgate, and the load bay comes with a 12-volt socket and a couple of tethering points. The rear seats fold in a 60/40 split, which is fairly typical for the class, but isn’t quite as flexible as the 40/20/40 split used by more premium (and pricier) rivals such as the BMW X1.

Towing

Of the entire Jaecoo 7 range, only the plug-in hybrid PHEV is rated to tow. It can handle up to 1,500kg, which is on par with rivals like the petrol versions of the Hyundai Tucson and Kia Sportage. If you want to tow more, you’ll need something like the 2.0 TDI 150 Volkswagen T-Roc that can pull up to 1,600kg, or the SEAT Ateca 1.5 TSI, which manages even more, at up to 1,800kg.

Safety & reliability

The Jaecoo 7 is equipped with an arsenal of driver-assistance systems as standard, plus a seven-year/100,000-mile warranty
Jaecoo 7 - front static
ProsCons
  • Lots of safety assistance technology is provided as standard
  • There’s a long warranty to help reassure customers
  • You also get a longer roadside recovery package than rivals
  • Euro NCAP rating applies only to the PHEV version
  • It’ll initially have a smaller dealer network as the brand integrates into the UK market
  • We don’t have any Driver Power data yet to say what the ownership experience is like

Euro NCAP has awarded the Jaecoo 7 its maximum five stars out of five score, putting it ahead of similarly priced four-star rivals like the MG ZS, and Renault Symbioz. If you want an even safer alternative, you’ll have to pay a little bit more and get a Toyota C-HR, which scored higher than the 7 in all categories, except in the safety technology section.

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

There was one caveat to the 7’s NCAP score, because it was penalised in the side pole and barrier tests due to the side curtain airbag not deploying correctly after getting caught in the C pillar trim. This problem was investigated and has since been rectified. It is also worth noting that this rating only applies to the plug-in hybrid model because that was the only version tested, but we doubt the lighter petrol version would be any less safe.

There is a whole host of standard safety assistance technology provided on the 7, such as adaptive cruise control, blind-spot detection, and emergency lane-keeping. 

Being such a new brand in the UK, it’s too early to tell how reliable Jaecoo’s cars will prove to be, but thanks to a seven-year, 100,000-mile warranty, the Jaecoo 7 comes with one of the most comprehensive aftersales packages available, matching the terms offered by Kia, and well beyond most mainstream brands. More impressive is that the entire warranty period is also covered by RAC breakdown cover.

In order to spread the cost of payments, Jaecoo offers owners the option of an interest-free service plan. A three-year charge of around £550 is competitive for a pure-petrol car. 

Key standard safety featuresEuro NCAP safety ratings
  • Surround camera system
  • Front and rear parking sensors
  • Safe exit warning
  • Lane departure warning
  • Autonomous emergency braking
  • Rear crossing traffic alert
  • Euro NCAP safety rating - 5 stars (2025, applies to PHEV version)
  • Adult occupant protection - 81%
  • Child occupant protection - 80%
  • Vulnerable road user protection - 80% 
  • Safety assist - 80%

Buying and owning

  • Best buy: Jaecoo 7 1.6T Deluxe
Advertisement - Article continues below
Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

The Jaecoo 7 is already so well-equipped that there isn’t much scope for personalisation. It comes down to the five exterior colours, and all but the no-cost white are £600 options, while a contrasting roof adds another £600. We’d suggest sticking with a single colour, because it doesn’t dramatically alter the way the car looks to have a contrasting colour.

Unless you can charge your Jaecoo 7 at home, and you’re a company car driver who would benefit from the lower benefit-in-kind (BiK) costs, we suggest sticking with the least expensive 1.6T Deluxe. It’s more economical and slightly quicker than the four-wheel drive version, and it’s a handy £5,000 less than the plug-in hybrid. 

Jaecoo 7 - rear detail

Alternatives

The Jaecoo 7 is aimed as a rival for models such as the Audi Q3, BMW X1 and MINI Countryman, but at a knockdown price. The reality is that it can’t compete with any of these more polished competitors, and we’d consider it more as a budget alternative to the likes of the Hyundai Tucson, Nissan Qashqai and Kia Sportage.

It’s similar to those cars in size, but the price tag pitches the Jaecoo 7 towards the small SUV sector and cars such as the Skoda Kamiq, Renault Captur and Peugeot 2008, while other Chinese models such as the MG HS and even the similar Omoda 5 are rivals.

Jaecoo 7 pictures

Frequently Asked Questions

There’s a long seven-year/100,000-mile warranty for the Jaecoo 7, which matches the longest amount of cover available in the new car market. What’s more, it’s backed up by seven years of roadside assistance, too.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Chief reviewer

Alex joined Auto Express as staff writer in early 2018, helping out with news, drives, features, and the occasional sports report. His current role of Chief reviewer sees him head up our road test team, which gives readers the full lowdown on our comparison tests.

New & used car deals

Jaecoo 7

Jaecoo 7

RRP £30,115Avg. savings £2,274 off RRP*Used from £26,745
Dacia Spring

Dacia Spring

RRP £14,995Avg. savings £1,676 off RRP*
Toyota Yaris Cross

Toyota Yaris Cross

RRP £26,495Avg. savings £1,879 off RRP*Used from £15,700
Kia Sportage

Kia Sportage

RRP £28,065Avg. savings £2,233 off RRP*Used from £15,297
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Have you considered?

Tesla Model Y review
Tesla Model Y - main image

Tesla Model Y review

In-depth reviews
23 Apr 2025
Used Honda HR-V (Mk3, 2021-date) buyer’s guide: small SUV suits the city
Used Honda HR-V Mk3 - front

Used Honda HR-V (Mk3, 2021-date) buyer’s guide: small SUV suits the city

Used car tests
21 Apr 2025

More on 7

Jaecoo 7 vs Skoda Kamiq: SUV newcomer takes on a family favourite
Jaecoo 7 and Skoda Kamiq - header image, front trackin

Jaecoo 7 vs Skoda Kamiq: SUV newcomer takes on a family favourite

The Jaecoo 7 is the latest Chinese car to arrive in the UK. The brand hopes its extra space will appeal to buyers of smaller SUVs, such as the Skoda K…
Car group tests
15 Mar 2025
Car Deal of the Day: Jaecoo 7 newcomer offers an appealing family SUV package for just £243 a month
Jaecoo 7 - full front

Car Deal of the Day: Jaecoo 7 newcomer offers an appealing family SUV package for just £243 a month

The new Jaecoo 7 has Range Rover-inspired looks at an appealing price. It’s our Deal of the Day for 2 March
News
2 Mar 2025
New Jaecoo 7 targets VW T-Roc and Toyota C-HR with sub-£30k price tag
Jaecoo 7 - white front

New Jaecoo 7 targets VW T-Roc and Toyota C-HR with sub-£30k price tag

Four-wheel drive and plug-in hybrid power is offered on Jaecoo’s first UK model
News
27 Nov 2024
Jaecoo J7 to launch premium Chinese brand’s UK arrival
JAECOO J7 - front

Jaecoo J7 to launch premium Chinese brand’s UK arrival

Chery’s sub-brand will be an upmarket alternative to Europe’s premium brands
News
20 Dec 2023