Basic Information

BrandBYD
SeriesSeagull
Year2024
First Registration2024/02
Mileage48,000km
Transfer Count-
FuelOther
TransmissionOther
Engine-
ColorWhite
Seats-

Condition Description

very good

Just arrived at our dealership! BYD Seagull model, 305km range, registered in February 2024, comes with a 6-year/150,000km factory warranty. Features a BYD blade battery, four driving modes, keyless entry, remote start, and supports both mobile phone Bluetooth keys and card keys. Supports a 3.3kW external power supply. Excellent condition, almost original paint, over 50,000km safe driving, one owner, local dealership. Welcome to visit and test drive!

0 transfers
Original factory warranty

Configuration Highlights

ISOFIX Child Seat Anchors
Auto Hold
Keyless Start System
Bluetooth/Hands-free
Connected Car
OTA Updates

Accident & Maintenance Records

Accident Record

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Maintenance Record

🔗 Open Link

Document Information

Inspection Expiry Date2028/02
Warranty Expiry Date-
Insurance Expiry Date2027/02

Q&A

More

Is there a mileage adjustment phenomenon in the Chinese used car market? How do you ensure the absolute authenticity of the odometer?

Odometer tampering is a common risk in the global used car industry. We verify the data by extracting transmission mileage from the OBD computer, checking the most recent maintenance record's mileage, and consulting the national traffic management app for annual inspection records. If there are irreconcilable discrepancies or conflicts in the data, we classify it as a tampered vehicle and refuse to export it.

Will my SWIFT international wire transfer be delayed due to intermediary bank issues, causing the vehicle to be resold?

As long as you provide us with a genuine and valid bank SWIFT MT103 wire transfer message (receipt) within the payment deadline specified in the contract, we will reserve the vehicle and continue with the port operations, even if the funds are held up in the intermediary bank for several days.

After the vehicle arrived at the port, it was found that the rubber parts of the chassis (such as dust covers and engine mounts) had extensive cracking. Does this fall under the compensation for "certain repair parts compensation"?

Absolutely not. The aging and cracking of rubber parts are inevitable over time and are a normal manifestation of vehicle depreciation. Our compensation only covers sudden and catastrophic mechanical failures, such as engine cylinder scoring or transmission gear breakage.