Xiaomi YU7 deliveries reach 6,042 in its first month as production ramps up
Xiaomi has run into a problem most automakers would envy. Its new electric SUV, the YU7, has attracted an incredible number of buyers. The challenge now is no longer convincing customers, but building them fast enough in a situation that tests the young carmaker's abilities and its customers' patience.
When the Xiaomi YU7 launched on June 26, the response was immediate and immense. Within the first 72 hours, the company secured what is reported to be between 280,800 and 315,900 locked-in orders, and that number excludes online orders. To put that in perspective, that's more cars than many established brands sell of a single model in an entire year. The hype was real.
Then, the first monthly delivery numbers for July came in, revealing a starkly different picture. Xiaomi delivered just 6,042 units of its new YU7. For the hundreds of thousands of people who put money down, that number just revealed the long road ahead.
The bottleneck is, unsurprisingly, production. Xiaomi Auto's first factory has an annual capacity of 150,000 vehicles. A second factory, which will eventually match that capacity, only finished construction in mid-June 2025 and is still in the process of ramping up. Even with both plants running at full steam, the company's total output would struggle to clear the initial wave of YU7 orders alone.
Tech giant Xiaomi is facing a major production challenge as overwhelming demand for its new YU7 electric SUV creates a delivery wait time of over 10 months for hundreds of thousands of customers.
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