AION V Lands in UK With Eight-Year Warranty and Servicing Package Worth £2,900

AION V electric SUV parked outside a Cotswold barn
AION V electric SUV parked outside a Cotswold barn

AION, the newest Chinese brand to arrive in Britain, has launched its first UK model with a warranty pitched directly at buyers who worry about long-term running costs. The AION V electric family SUV comes with cover lasting eight years or 100,000 miles, which the company says is the longest standard warranty on any new car currently sold in the UK.

The warranty sits at the centre of a wider ownership package AION calls the Great 8 Promise. As well as the eight-year mechanical cover, buyers get eight years of servicing, eight years of breakdown assistance and a free MOT every year until the car turns eight. AION puts the combined value of those extras at more than £2,900, and the whole package can be passed on if the car is sold, rather than ending when the first owner moves on.

The AION V electric SUV is the brand’s first model for the UK market.

What the Great 8 Promise covers

The headline figure is the warranty itself. AION covers the majority of the car’s systems and components for eight years or 100,000 miles, whichever comes first. That list runs from the electric drive system, on-board charger and vehicle control modules through to the infotainment, heating and air conditioning, steering, suspension, safety systems and the factory-fitted equipment that comes with the car.

There are a few sensible limits. Spare parts for the battery or the drive units are covered for four years or 50,000 miles, while any parts a customer buys separately carry a two-year, unlimited-mileage guarantee. Parts replaced under the warranty stay covered for the rest of the Great 8 period.

The £2,900 figure comes from the extras bundled around the warranty. AION calculates roughly £1,400 of servicing across the eight years, £329 of MOT fees based on the government rate of £54.85 for years three to eight, and around £1,200 of roadside assistance priced at £150 a year if bought privately. Add those together and the total lands at £2,929.

A warranty that follows the car, not the owner

The transferable element is the part used-car buyers will notice. Most manufacturer warranties either end at a fixed age regardless of owner or shorten when a car changes hands. AION’s cover stays with the vehicle for the full eight years or 100,000 miles, so a second or third owner inherits whatever time and mileage is left.

That mirrors a move Honda made in the UK earlier this year, when it introduced an eight-year warranty that also transfers to used buyers. The logic is the same: a warranty that carries over tends to protect resale value, because the next buyer takes on a car that still has years of factory cover behind it. For a new brand with no track record in Britain, that reassurance can make the difference between a test drive and a sale.

AION’s Great 8 Promise bundles warranty, servicing, breakdown cover and MOTs.

Lower repair bills and a friendlier insurance group

AION has also tried to head off a problem that has tripped up other newcomers: insurance. Some early Chinese models proved expensive or awkward to insure because repairers struggled to source parts and underwriters had little data to price the risk.

“Parts availability and repair costs significantly influence the car insurance industry’s assessment of risk,” explained Ben Hurford, Aftersales Director at AION Auto UK. “Some early adopters of Chinese vehicles struggled to get insurance cover, and we made sure to learn from their experience and make sure AION owners did not experience the same problems. Before launching in the UK, we spent nearly a year working with Thatcham Research to optimise the AION V in terms of repairability and insurability and to make insurance premiums as competitive as possible.”

The work appears to have paid off. The AION V carries a group 32 insurance rating, which AION says is one of the lowest among new entrant brands in its segment. Thatcham’s ratings weigh up damage and repair costs, performance, safety and security, so a lower group generally points to cheaper premiums.

How it stacks up against other long warranties

Long warranties have become a familiar weapon for brands trying to win over cautious buyers. Kia covers seven years or 100,000 miles, Toyota stretches cover up to ten years through its relay scheme as long as the car is serviced at a main dealer, and MG also runs a seven-year package. AION’s eight years sits near the top of that group, and the transferable structure and bundled servicing give it a different shape from rivals that cover only the car’s mechanical parts.

For buyers, the appeal is simple. An electric SUV from an unfamiliar badge is an easier purchase when the maintenance, the MOT and the breakdown cover are accounted for from the start, and when the safety net does not disappear the moment the car is sold. Whether the AION V is good enough to tempt people away from established names will come down to how it drives and what it costs, but on ownership peace of mind the brand has set out an aggressive opening offer.

Jarrod

Jarrod Partridge is the founder of Motoring Chronicle and an FIA accredited journalist with over 30 years of experience following motorsport and the global automotive industry. A member of the AIPS International Sports Press Association, Jarrod has covered Formula 1 races and automotive events at venues around the world, bringing first-hand insight to every race report, car review, and industry analysis he writes. His work spans the full breadth of motoring — from the latest EV launches and road car reviews to the cutting edge of motorsport competition.

Leave a Comment

More in News

The pumps and sign of the Texaco Petrol Station on Bath Road

Britain Has Lost Four in Five Petrol Stations Since the 1960s as Fuel Deserts Spread

Filling up has quietly become harder for millions of drivers, ...
New car market holds steady as fleets drive growth

Why More Than a Quarter of New Cars Sold in May Were Electric

For the first time this year, more than a quarter ...

What the Bike Box Rule Means for Drivers Facing £100 Fines This Bike Week

Edge over the first white line at a set of ...
Afternoon traffic on busy British motorway M1

Why Company Car Drivers Can Now Claim Up to 26p a Mile for Fuel

Anyone who drives a company car for work should check ...
Stradman's Lamborghini Gallardo Catches Fire on the Side of the Road, and the Aftermath Is Hard to Watch

Stradman’s Lamborghini Gallardo Catches Fire, and the Aftermath Is Hard to Watch

Stradman's 2006 Lamborghini Gallardo caught fire on the side of ...

Trending on Motoring Chronicle

Aerial view of car storage or parking lot with new and used vehicles for export to USA and Internationally. Vehicle transportation facility, waiting to pass customs, duties licenses and permits.

The Used Car Crunch: Why Good Second-Hand Buys Are About to Get Much Rarer

The used car market in the United Kingdom has always ...
(03) Maserati MC20 Cielo_1000 Miglia Experience Florida

New Autonomous World Speed Record set with Indy Autonomous Challenge Maserati MC20 [Photo Gallery]

Indy Autonomous Challenge (IAC) and Politecnico di Milano, Italy’s largest ...
2026 Honda Passport TrailSport

Seven Honda Models Earn 2026 “Editors’ Choice” Awards from Car and Driver

The editors at Car and Driver have honored seven Honda models with ...
Car crash vehicles ready to be scrapped

Paying For Their Scam: Crash For Cash Fraud Adds £50 To Every Honest Driver’s Premium

Every UK car insurance policy now carries a hidden charge ...
Parents can have a lesson at Young Driver to make sure bad habits haven’t slipped in

It Is Now Illegal for Your Instructor to Book Your Driving Test: What Changed on 12 May

From 12 May 2026, the rules around booking a UK ...