General
The Cheapest EVs You Can Buy in Canada in 2026
February 22, 2026
The affordable EV era is here. Here's every option ranked by price, with the specs that actually matter.
The Landscape Has Changed
For years, the cheapest new EV in Canada cost around $40,000 CAD. If you wanted something under $35,000, your only option was the used market. That's changing in 2026.
The arrival of Chinese-manufactured EVs — combined with increased competition forcing established brands to sharpen their pricing — means Canadian buyers now have more affordable electric options than ever. Some of these vehicles are available now. Others are expected within the next 6-12 months.
Here's every affordable EV option in Canada, ranked by estimated price, with honest assessments of what you get and what you give up.
The Comparison Table
| Vehicle | Est. Price (CAD) | Range | Motor | Fast Charge | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BYD Seagull | ~$25,000 | 305 km (CLTC) | 55 kW | 30 kW | Expected 2026-2027 |
| MG4 Standard | ~$32,000 | 350 km (WLTP) | 125 kW | 87 kW | Expected 2026 |
| BYD Dolphin Standard | ~$33,000 | 340 km (WLTP) | 70 kW | 60 kW | Expected 2026-2027 |
| Chery Omoda E5 | ~$35,000 | 400 km (WLTP) | 150 kW | 120 kW | Expected 2026-2027 |
| BYD Dolphin Extended | ~$38,000 | 427 km (WLTP) | 150 kW | 88 kW | Expected 2026-2027 |
| Nissan Leaf S | ~$39,500 | 240 km (EPA) | 110 kW | 50 kW | Available now |
| Chevrolet Equinox EV 1LT | ~$45,000 | 459 km (EPA) | 159 kW | 150 kW | Available now |
| Hyundai Kona Electric Essential | ~$44,000 | 418 km (EPA) | 150 kW | 102 kW | Available now |
| Volkswagen ID.4 Pro | ~$47,000 | 406 km (EPA) | 210 kW | 135 kW | Available now |
Prices are MSRP before provincial or federal incentives. Chinese EV prices are estimates. Range figures use each manufacturer's official rating system — CLTC is the most generous, WLTP is moderate, EPA is the most conservative.
Model-by-Model Breakdown
1. BYD Seagull — ~$25,000 CAD
The headline act. If BYD delivers the Seagull at or near this price, it rewrites the Canadian EV market overnight. Nothing else comes close on price.
The catch: It's small (subcompact hatchback), slow to fast-charge (30 kW), and range is modest for Canadian conditions. The 305 km CLTC rating likely translates to around 240-270 km in real-world summer driving and 160-200 km in winter.
Best for: Urban commuters with home charging. Households wanting an affordable second EV. Buyers who prioritize low upfront cost above all else.
Not for: Road trippers, families needing space, anyone without reliable home charging.
Read our full BYD Seagull profile
2. MG4 Standard — ~$32,000 CAD
The balanced option. The MG4 (from SAIC-owned MG) is a compact hatchback that's been one of Europe's best-selling EVs since 2023. It offers a strong blend of range, performance, and price.
| Spec | Detail |
|---|---|
| Range (WLTP) | 350 km |
| Motor | 125 kW (170 hp) |
| Battery | 51 kWh (LFP) |
| DC fast charge | 87 kW |
| 0-100 km/h | 7.7 sec |
The MG4's rear-wheel-drive layout gives it surprisingly engaging handling for an affordable EV. European reviewers consistently praise the driving dynamics. The interior is functional but won't win any awards — similar to the Seagull's price-reflects-materials approach, but slightly more refined.
Best for: Buyers wanting a well-rounded daily driver at a competitive price. People who enjoy driving.
Not for: Those needing SUV practicality or AWD.
3. BYD Dolphin Standard Range — ~$33,000 CAD
The better BYD for most people. The Dolphin offers a meaningful step up from the Seagull in range, interior quality, and overall refinement. The price premium over the Seagull is worth it for anyone who can afford the difference.
However, the Standard Range Dolphin's 70 kW motor is notably underpowered. Highway merging requires planning, and mountain passes will test your patience. For $5,000 more, the Extended Range model doubles the power and adds meaningful range.
Read our full BYD Dolphin profile
4. Chery Omoda E5 — ~$35,000 CAD
The crossover alternative. Most affordable EVs are hatchbacks or sedans. The Omoda E5 is a proper crossover/SUV, which aligns with what 80% of Canadian new-car buyers actually purchase.
It also has the fastest DC charging on this list among the Chinese options — 120 kW means usable road-trip charging. With an estimated 400+ km WLTP range and 150 kW motor, the specs are competitive with the Hyundai Kona Electric at a potentially $9,000 lower price.
The trade-off: Chery is a complete unknown in Canada. No brand recognition, no dealer network, no Canadian owner community.
Read our full Chery brand overview
5. BYD Dolphin Extended Range — ~$38,000 CAD
The value champion. This is the version of the Dolphin that makes the strongest case. At an estimated $38,000-$42,000, you get 427 km WLTP range, a 150 kW motor that's actually quick, and the best interior in BYD's affordable lineup.
It costs roughly the same as a base Nissan Leaf but offers nearly twice the range. It costs $7,000-$10,000 less than a Hyundai Kona Electric while offering comparable specs. If BYD nails the Canadian pricing, this is the one that keeps other automakers up at night.
6. Nissan Leaf S — ~$39,500 CAD
The known quantity. The Leaf has been on sale in Canada for over a decade. You know what you're getting: a proven, reliable, if somewhat dated EV with an extensive dealer network.
The problem: At $39,500 for 240 km of range, the Leaf's value proposition has eroded badly. Chinese EVs offer more range, more tech, and lower prices. The Leaf's advantage is that you can buy one today, from a dealer five minutes from your house, with a decade of Canadian service history behind it.
If you need an EV right now and don't want to wait for Chinese options, the Leaf works. But it's hard to recommend at this price when alternatives are months away.
7. Chevrolet Equinox EV 1LT — ~$45,000 CAD
The mainstream choice. The Equinox EV is GM's bid for the affordable EV market, and it delivers on several fronts: 459 km EPA range (the best on this list), 150 kW DC fast charging (also the best), and the backing of Canada's largest dealer network.
At $45,000, it costs significantly more than the Chinese options. But it's available now, from dealers everywhere, with a North American warranty and parts infrastructure. For buyers who want an affordable EV without any uncertainty about service or support, the Equinox EV is the safest choice.
8. Hyundai Kona Electric Essential — ~$44,000 CAD
The proven competitor. The Kona Electric has been one of Canada's best-selling EVs, and for good reason. It's well-built, efficient, and backed by Hyundai's strong warranty (5 years/100,000 km comprehensive, 8 years/160,000 km battery).
At $44,000, it's no longer the value play it once was — not with Chinese options coming in $10,000-$15,000 cheaper. But Hyundai's established dealer network, proven Canadian winter performance, and strong resale values count for something.
9. Volkswagen ID.4 Pro — ~$47,000 CAD
The premium-adjacent option. The ID.4 offers more space than anything else on this list (it's a proper compact SUV), solid range, fast charging, and the VW dealer network. Interior quality is a step above the sub-$40,000 options.
At $47,000, it's pushing the boundary of "affordable," but it regularly sees dealer incentives and is available with AWD — something no Chinese option on this list offers yet.
Price After Provincial Incentives
Provincial incentives can dramatically change the math. Here's what the effective price looks like in Quebec and British Columbia:
| Vehicle | MSRP | After QC Rebate ($7,000) | After BC Rebate ($4,000) |
|---|---|---|---|
| BYD Seagull | ~$25,000 | ~$18,000 | ~$21,000 |
| MG4 Standard | ~$32,000 | ~$25,000 | ~$28,000 |
| BYD Dolphin Standard | ~$33,000 | ~$26,000 | ~$29,000 |
| Chery Omoda E5 | ~$35,000 | ~$28,000 | ~$31,000 |
| BYD Dolphin Extended | ~$38,000 | ~$31,000 | ~$34,000 |
| Nissan Leaf S | ~$39,500 | ~$32,500 | ~$35,500 |
| Chevy Equinox EV | ~$45,000 | ~$38,000 | ~$41,000 |
| Hyundai Kona Electric | ~$44,000 | ~$37,000 | ~$40,000 |
| VW ID.4 Pro | ~$47,000 | ~$40,000 | ~$43,000 |
Incentive eligibility for Chinese-manufactured EVs has not been confirmed. Amounts shown assume full eligibility. Provincial programs have MSRP caps and other conditions — verify current eligibility before purchasing.
A BYD Seagull at $18,000 after Quebec's rebate. A BYD Dolphin Extended Range for $31,000 in Quebec. These are numbers that fundamentally change who can afford an EV in Canada.
What Actually Matters: Choosing the Right One
Price is the starting point, not the whole story. Here's how to think about which affordable EV fits your life:
If you commute under 60 km daily and have home charging:
Almost any vehicle on this list works. Buy the cheapest one that makes you happy. The BYD Seagull saves you the most money upfront. The MG4 or Dolphin give you more range cushion and refinement for a few thousand more.
If you commute 60-120 km daily:
You need real-world winter range of at least 200 km to stay comfortable. The BYD Dolphin Extended Range, Chery Omoda E5, Chevy Equinox EV, and Hyundai Kona Electric all deliver this. The Seagull and Leaf get tight in winter.
If you need to road trip regularly:
DC fast charging speed matters. The Chevy Equinox EV (150 kW) and VW ID.4 (135 kW) are the clear winners. The Chery Omoda E5 (120 kW) is respectable. The BYD models' slower charging makes long trips less convenient.
If you need an SUV/crossover:
The Chery Omoda E5, Chevy Equinox EV, Hyundai Kona Electric, and VW ID.4 are your options. The hatchbacks (Seagull, Dolphin, MG4) are great cars but not great for families needing cargo space.
If you want to buy today, not wait:
The Nissan Leaf, Chevy Equinox EV, Hyundai Kona Electric, and VW ID.4 are available at Canadian dealerships right now. Every Chinese option requires waiting for official Canadian availability.
The Honest Take
The arrival of Chinese EVs is the biggest shift in Canadian vehicle affordability in decades. Vehicles like the BYD Seagull and Dolphin aren't just marginally cheaper — they're $10,000-$20,000 less than the nearest established competitors with comparable specs.
But "available soon" and "available now" are different things. If you need a vehicle today, the established options have real advantages: dealer networks, proven Canadian winter performance, known warranty support, and resale value data.
If you can wait 6-12 months, the incoming Chinese options represent significantly better value. The trade-off is uncertainty about service networks, exact pricing, and long-term reliability in the Canadian market.
Either way, 2026 is the year that "EVs are too expensive" stops being a valid argument in Canada. The affordable options are here — or very nearly here.