BYD FLASH Charging Adds 223 Miles in Five Minutes, UK Debut in DENZA Z9 GT
BYD has shown its fastest charging technology in the UK for the first time, and the numbers are striking. The Chinese manufacturer demonstrated what it calls FLASH Charging at its UK headquarters in Uxbridge, claiming a battery can go from 5 to 70 per cent in five minutes. The first car coming to British roads able to accept these speeds is the DENZA Z9 GT, a large electric grand tourer with a WLTP combined range of 372 miles. On that figure, BYD says a five-minute charge can add around 223 miles of range.
Charging time, more than range, is the barrier that keeps many drivers from switching to electric. A petrol fill-up takes a couple of minutes, while even a fast public charger usually asks for twenty to forty. If FLASH Charging behaves on a public network the way it did in the controlled demonstration at Uxbridge, presented by BYD executive vice-president Stella Li, it would bring electric refuelling much closer to the time it takes to fill a tank.
What “Ready in 5, Full in 9, Cold Add 3” Means
BYD has packaged the claims into a simple phrase. “Ready” describes a charge from 5 to 70 per cent in five minutes, enough to cover the bulk of most journeys. “Full” covers a 10 to 97 per cent charge in nine minutes, close to a complete top-up in the time it takes to buy a coffee. “Cold Add 3” addresses the situation that worries cold-climate drivers most, with BYD claiming a 20 to 97 per cent charge in twelve minutes even at minus 30 degrees Celsius, a temperature at which many electric cars slow their charging dramatically to protect the battery.
These speeds rely on the latest Blade Battery 2.0, BYD’s newest version of the flat lithium-iron-phosphate pack that the company builds in-house. Because BYD makes its own batteries, motors and power electronics, it can tune the whole system to handle the heat and current that very fast charging generates. The demonstration figures are manufacturer claims measured in ideal conditions, so independent testing on UK chargers will be the real test, but the targets BYD has set are well beyond what most electric cars manage today.

For context, many of the quickest electric cars on sale in Britain today peak at charging rates that add roughly 100 to 150 miles in fifteen minutes. BYD is claiming to beat that comfortably while also holding the pace in freezing weather, which is where real-world charging often falls short of the headline figures.
The DENZA Z9 GT Leads BYD’s UK Charge
The car used for the demonstration, the DENZA Z9 GT, is the first model confirmed for the UK that can accept FLASH Charging. DENZA is BYD’s premium sub-brand, and the Z9 GT is a long, low estate-styled grand tourer aimed squarely at established luxury electric cars. With a WLTP combined range of 372 miles, BYD says a five-minute charge can add about 223 miles, while nine minutes adds roughly 323 miles. In practical terms, a driver could stop for a few minutes at the start of a long trip and have more than enough range to reach almost any destination in mainland Britain without a second charge.
That puts the Z9 GT into direct competition with cars such as the Porsche Taycan, the Audi e-tron GT, the BMW i5 Touring and the Mercedes-Benz EQE. Those rivals have strong brand recognition and polished cabins, but none currently quotes charging speeds in the range BYD is promising. If DENZA can pair that charging performance with competitive pricing when UK figures are announced, it would give buyers a reason to look beyond the familiar German names.
A Charger Designed to Be Easier to Use
BYD also used the event to show the hardware itself. The FLASH Charger uses a T-shaped unit that houses two cables, each hanging vertically on a rail rather than lying coiled on the ground. BYD says this makes the charger easier to connect whatever side the car’s charging port is on, and it keeps the heavy cable off the floor so it stays clean and dry, a small detail that anyone who has wrestled with a grubby public charging lead in the rain will recognise.

Where You Will Be Able to Use It
The important caveat for buyers is that these speeds depend on FLASH-capable chargers being in place. A car that can charge this quickly still needs hardware that can deliver the power, and most of the UK’s existing public rapid chargers will not reach the rates BYD quoted at Uxbridge. The pace of any roll-out of compatible chargers, and how widely they appear on motorways and at retail sites, will decide how much of this charging performance owners actually feel on a typical journey.
BYD has not yet confirmed UK pricing or order dates for the DENZA Z9 GT, and those details, along with confirmation of which chargers will support FLASH Charging, will follow closer to launch. For now, the demonstration sets a marker for how fast electric charging could become, and it puts pressure on rival manufacturers and charging networks to keep up. For drivers still nervous about long journeys in an electric car, a five-minute stop that adds more than 200 miles is exactly the kind of promise that could change their minds.