BYD’s Africa Playbook: 300 Fast-Chargers, 7 Models, and What It Means for Nigeria, Kenya and Egypt

BYD has made no secret of its ambitions in Africa. The world’s largest electric vehicle manufacturer is not just selling cars on the continent — it is building the infrastructure, the dealer networks, and the long-term relationships needed to become the dominant automotive brand across Africa. And it is doing it faster than most people realise.

Seven Models, Growing Fast

BYD currently sells seven models in South Africa — five fully electric and two hybrid — ranging from the compact Dolphin to the new Atto 8, a seven-seater PHEV SUV that launched in April 2026 at a starting price of R1,059,900. The lineup is designed to cover as many buyer segments as possible: urban commuters, families, fleet operators, and pick-up truck users.

The Shark pick-up hybrid, in particular, has resonated strongly with African buyers. Designed for mining, agriculture, and rugged terrains, it delivers the torque of a diesel powertrain with the long-range efficiency of a hybrid electric system — a combination that makes practical sense across large parts of the continent.

300 Fast-Chargers in South Africa by End of 2026

The most significant infrastructure announcement BYD has made for Africa is its plan to build up to 300 fast-charging stations in South Africa by the end of 2026. Stella Li, BYD’s Executive Vice President, confirmed this target during an interview with Bloomberg, describing South Africa as the entry point for a model that will then be duplicated across other African countries.

This matters enormously. One of the most common concerns about buying an EV in Africa is the lack of charging infrastructure. BYD is directly addressing that concern with capital investment, not just promises.

Tripling the Dealer Network

Beyond charging, BYD is rapidly expanding its physical retail presence. The company grew its South African dealerships from 13 to 20 by end of 2025, and plans to reach 30 to 35 locations by end of 2026. Each dealership expansion also brings trained technicians, official spare parts inventory, and warranty service — the after-sales ecosystem that African buyers need to feel confident in a new brand.

What Does This Mean for Nigeria, Kenya, and Egypt?

South Africa is BYD’s African beachhead, but the strategy is explicitly continental. BYD’s leadership has stated that the South Africa model — charging infrastructure, dealership build-out, local service support — is designed to be replicated country by country.

For Nigeria, this is particularly timely. With the federal government’s new 40% import tariff on fully built vehicles and EV exemptions from the upcoming green tax, BYD models imported through trusted platforms like Autoimport Africa are now more cost-effective than they have ever been. Models like the BYD Atto 3, Dolphin, and Seal offer competitive pricing, modern features, and the backing of a manufacturer actively investing in the continent.

In Kenya, local EV distributor MojaEV is already moving toward local assembly in partnership with domestic assemblers — a move that signals growing market confidence and will eventually lower prices further.

In Egypt, BYD is part of a broader wave of Chinese automakers establishing local assembly operations, reducing import costs and shortening delivery timelines.

The Long Game

BYD’s Africa strategy is not opportunistic — it is structural. The company is building the foundations for decade-long dominance: charging networks, dealer presence, local assembly partnerships, and a model range that directly addresses African buyer needs. For anyone considering an EV or PHEV purchase on the continent, BYD’s trajectory is hard to ignore.

If you want to explore BYD models available for import into your country through Autoimport Africa, browse our current listings or speak to one of our import specialists today.