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Leapmotor D99 Signals China’s Next Electric Minivan Arms Race

Leapmotor has spent the past decade quietly sharpening its tools, and for its 10th anniversary the Stellantis-backed Chinese brand rolled out something big—literally. Meet the Leapmotor D99, the company’s first electric minivan and a clear signal that China’s MPV segment is no longer just about luxury sofas on wheels, but about battery bragging rights.

The D99 lands in familiar company. Rivals like the Xpeng X9, Zeekr 009, and Li Auto Mega have already turned the once-humble minivan into a rolling tech lounge. Leapmotor’s twist? Offering both a full battery-electric version and a range-extender variant that flexes some of the largest battery packs the segment has seen.

Visually, the D99 sticks to Leapmotor’s established design language. The nose is almost comically short, with the windshield pushed far forward past the front axle—a layout that should translate to excellent outward visibility and maximum cabin volume. Smooth surfacing dominates the profile, broken up by retractable door handles (still legal for now in China) and blacked-out B- and C-pillars that create a floating-roof effect.

At the rear, a full-width LED light bar gives the D99 a suitably futuristic send-off. It’s clean, inoffensive, and very much in line with what Chinese buyers currently favor—less statement piece, more high-end appliance.

Where the D99 really starts swinging elbows is underneath. The range-extender version rides on an 800-volt architecture and packs an enormous 80.3-kWh battery. That’s not just large for a plug-in hybrid—it’s the largest battery currently offered in any range-extender vehicle. For context, Zeekr’s 9X EREV tops out at 70 kWh, while the upcoming range-extended Xpeng X9 settles for 63.3.

Leapmotor claims the D99 EREV can cover up to 500 kilometers (311 miles) on electric power alone before the combustion engine needs to wake up. While engine details haven’t been officially confirmed, expectations point to a familiar 1.5-liter four-cylinder similar to the unit used in the C10 REEV.

If that still sounds too compromised, the fully electric D99 removes the engine entirely and turns the voltage dial even higher. Its 1000-volt platform supports a massive 115-kWh CATL battery, good for a claimed 720 kilometers (447 miles) of range. That puts it squarely in long-distance territory and suggests ultra-fast charging capability to match—details Leapmotor hasn’t yet shared but almost certainly will.

Interior photos remain under wraps, but expectations are easy to set. Leapmotor’s recent models lean heavily on expansive screens, plush seating, and an emphasis on rear-seat comfort. This is a minivan designed less for hands-on drivers and more for executives, families, or VIP passengers who expect to recline while someone—or something—else handles the steering.

Pricing and market availability are still unknown, though more information is promised in the coming weeks. Whether the D99 ever ventures beyond China remains to be seen, but its spec sheet alone makes one thing clear: the electric minivan is no longer a niche experiment. It’s a battleground—and Leapmotor just showed up with one of the biggest batteries in the room.

Source: Leapmotor