China has never had trouble making things affordable, and electric vehicles are no exception. Still, $6,200 for a feature-packed EV with 190 miles of range, and, not to mention, exceptionally adorable looks, is enough to turn heads without emptying wallets. 

Meet the 2026 Wuling Hongguang Mini EV, the car that doesn’t just undercut the competition, but it makes the competition look like it’s robbing you blind. The automaker rolled it out in late March 2026, offering four variants priced between roughly $6,200 and $7,600, before subsidies. 

Wuling Hongguang Mini EV front profile.

Wuling Cars

What does $6,200 actually buy you?

Quite a lot, actually. The 2026 model comes with a redesigned exterior Wuling calls “sweet square.” Think boxy but cute exteriors, with circular LED headlights that look like they’re permanently surprised.

Inside, a 10.1-inch touchscreen sits above a dashboard with over a dozen storage compartments, perhaps because the maker thinks commuters carry a lot of stuff. There’s a column-mounted gear selector that frees up center console space. 

The HVAC system also supports remote climate control for scorching summers. And in case you actually want to carry an alarming amount of stuff, the rear seats fold flat to provide 838 liters of cargo room (that’s a lot). Fast charging tops up the battery from 30% to 80% in just 35 minutes.

Wuling Hongguang Mini EV interiors.

Wuling Cars

Why should you care about the tiny EV? 

And now, the most interesting part. The top-specced Hongguang Mini EV provides a range of up to 187 miles (around 301 kilometers) on China’s CLTC, which might translate to ~130 miles on the EPA standard (but that’s just an approximation based on the general trend). 

Anyway, the range is enough for daily commuters, their daily errands, going to the office, and the occasional short road trip, and there’s a reason why I say this. Wuling’s Hongguang Mini EV finished 2025 as China’s second-best-selling battery-operated EV, with sales climbing 55% year-on-year to 427,000 units; that’s more than Tesla’s Model Y

Altogether, the nameplate has crossed 1.8 million units in sales, making it the top-selling Chinese-brand pure electric vehicle to date. Given that the 2026 edition brings a better range, smarter tech, and adorable looks, it’s bound to sell even better in the region.