Sean – AutoApp Dev https://www.autoapp.sg/dev Thu, 13 Nov 2025 06:34:06 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 BYD Seal 6 Review https://www.autoapp.sg/dev/?p=284297 Thu, 13 Nov 2025 06:34:06 +0000 https://www.autoapp.sg/?p=284297 The BYD Seal 6 is not trying to be the next big automotive flex, but rather to be a practical, functional option for sedan buyers.


Once upon a time, the three-box saloon was the undisputed choice for family buyers. No nonsense, boot out the back, honest-to-goodness motoring. These days, of course, it’s all coupe-SUV-this and cross-something-that.

But every now and then, a carmaker decides to swim against the current. That’s what BYD did with its new Seal 6.

Looks May Not Thrill, But the Price Will

BYD Seal 6

The Seal 6 isn’t going to set Instagram alight. It’s not going to draw iPhones at the valet line. Its silhouette blends into traffic like a polite commuter in the MRT.

But then you look at the price tag.

BYD Seal 6

Priced around SGD$171,388, it undercuts most, if not all rivals in the market. Even the JMEV Elight is marginally more expensive. If you want a set of wheels with a decent monthly instalment plan, this is it.

Composed, Capable… But Not Quite Charming

BYD Seal 6 rims

Like most new EVs that are being launched, the BYD Seal 6 slots into the Category A COE bracket thanks to a detuned 97kW motor with 220Nm of torque.

Realistically, you won’t win any drag races at the traffic light grand prix, but for the average driver, it’s brisk enough. We found that keeping it in Sport mode is the sweet spot for this car.

BYD Seal 6 side view

Being shorter, the Seal 6’s turning radius is tighter; 5.5 metres versus the Seal’s 5.7. Whether it’s making a U-turn on a narrow road or reversing into a multi-storey parking spot on the first go, the Seal 6’s agility is genuinely refreshing.

Throw in a 360-degree camera, and you’ve got a car that makes urban driving far less stressful than you’d expect from a full-sized electric saloon. At 1,780kg, the Seal 6 is 142kg lighter than the Seal. That should translate into greater efficiency. It also rides on smaller 17-inch wheels, which helps both range and ride comfort.

In our real-world test, the Seal 6 clocked 15.1kWh/100km. And with a smaller battery on board, it’s impressive that the Seal 6 can still muster up a real-world 350km of range. For most Singaporeans, that’s a full week of commuting without the anxiety of finding a charger.

With smaller wheels and a lighter body, it’s noticeably more forgiving over uneven roads. Nasty stretches of tarmac will still catch it off guard, but the overall ride is far more settled and family-friendly. It feels less tightly wound, less eager to pounce, and that’s a compliment.

Practical and planted

BYD Seal 6 cabin

Inside, BYD has dialled down the glitter. Despite being pitched as the more affordable sibling, the Seal 6 doesn’t feel like a budget version. In fact, its cabin build quality is right up there with the regular Seal. Perhaps even better, depending on what you value.

BYD Seal 6 infotainment screen
BYD Seal 6 wireless charger

The rotating screen is gone, replaced with a more conventional (and more usable) fixed 12.8-inch unit. Tech nerds will appreciate the 50W wireless phone charger with active cooling.

BYD Seal 6 rear seats
BYD Seal 6 frunk
BYD Seal 6 boot

Rear legroom is decent, and the flat floor means even the middle seat is bearable. The 460-litre boot has a low aperture, making it easier for cargo to be loaded.

Should You Buy One?

The BYD Seal 6 is well-priced and engineered for efficiency. If your commute involves expressways, school runs, and the occasional Malaysia trip, this car starts to make an awful lot of sense.

But, if you live for the joy of driving and think a good car should dance through corners, you might still gravitate toward the BYD Seal instead.

Technical Specifications

BYD Seal 6

Engine: Single Electric Motor
Powertrain: Rear-Wheel Drive
Power: 95 kW (127 bhp)
Torque: 220 Nm
Gearbox: Single-Speed (A)
0100km/h: 10.9 Seconds
Top Speed: 160 km/h
Battery Capacity: 56.64 kWh
Drive Range: 425 km (claimed)
Energy Consumption: 6.6 km/kWh (claimed)
Price: S$171,388 with COE (accurate at the time of this article)

Photo Credits: Sean Loo (@auto.driven)


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Grab pilots high-accuracy GPS to sharpen Navigation on GrabMaps in Singapore https://www.autoapp.sg/dev/?p=284251 Tue, 11 Nov 2025 10:32:10 +0000 https://www.autoapp.sg/?p=284251 Grab Singapore has launched a new pilot programme that brings lane-level GPS precision to its driver- and delivery-partners, promising sharper navigation and smoother pick-ups.


In collaboration with OPPO, Qualcomm Technologies and Swift Navigation, this initiative marks Southeast Asia’s first deployment of high-accuracy GPS positioning integrated directly into a mobile phone and app experience.

From city canyons to centimetre-level clarity

Standard GPS accuracy can degrade beyond 20 metres in dense cities. Grab’s new pilot combines advanced hardware, chipsets and cloud-based correction signals, delivering positioning that is up to ten times more accurate than conventional GPS.

“Grab is the first to bring this level of precise positioning technology to ride-hailing in Southeast Asia. Driver- and delivery-partners will be driving with technology that is at the cutting edge. With advanced devices and precision GPS corrections working together, our partners can navigate complex urban environments more confidently, improving efficiency and unlocking new earning potential.”

Nilofer Christensen, Head of Consumer Product, GrabMaps

Four specialists, one precise system

  • OPPO provides its Find N5 foldable phone, equipped with Dual Frequency GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite System)
  • Qualcomm Technologies activates Meter-Level Positioning for Mobile within the Snapdragon® 8 Elite Mobile Platform that powers the OPPO Find N5. This allows the phone to receive real-time GPS correction signals.
  • Swift Navigation supplies its cloud-based Skylark™ Precise Positioning Service, which uses advanced atmospheric modelling and a network of ground reference stations to correct GPS errors and deliver up to 10x greater accuracy. In Singapore, Skylark taps into accurate GNSS data from the Singapore Satellite Positioning Reference Network (SiReNT), operated by the Singapore Land Authority (SLA).

Through learnings from this pilot, Grab plans to extend the enhanced positioning capability to its proprietary Karta devices in the near future, ensuring that more driver- and delivery-partners can benefit over time.

Of course, GPS is only half the story in Singapore, where so many journeys disappear into basement carparks and underground drop-off points. No matter how precise your satellite fix is, signals will eventually fade as you descend beneath the surface.

To address this, Grab has been quietly mapping basements and carparks across the island using its proprietary KartaCam devices and LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) technology. These maps, combined with advanced map-matching algorithms and a dead-reckoning system, allow GrabMaps to preserve turn-by-turn guidance even when satellites fall silent.

As of November 2025, basement carparks of key hotels such as the Mandarin Oriental, Parkroyal Collection Marina Bay and The Ritz-Carlton, Millenia Singapore, as well as shopping malls including Marina Square, Millenia Walk and Millenia Singapore, have been mapped. The effort is ongoing and will progressively extend to more locations where GPS signals are typically weakest.

The pilot began in October 2025 and currently involves nearly 250 selected driver- and delivery-partners. Around 60 of them have been provided with OPPO Find N5 foldable devices sponsored by Grab and OPPO.

What it means for consumers

For passengers and consumers, the technology is invisible. You are unlikely to see a new button in the app, but you may notice:

  • More accurate estimated arrival times, especially in dense districts.
  • Fewer missed turns leading to circuitous detours.
  • Driver-partners arriving at the correct entrance of a sprawling mall or hotel.
  • Food and parcel deliveries finding the right apartment tower or drop-off zone more consistently.

In effect, lane-level accuracy helps ensure Grab’s services arrive where they are needed, not “somewhere nearby”.


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Subaru Forester e-Boxer Hybrid Review https://www.autoapp.sg/dev/?p=284225 Mon, 10 Nov 2025 12:20:15 +0000 https://www.autoapp.sg/?p=284225 The Subaru Forester is a rugged reminder that while fashion might fade, function will endure.


There are cars that dazzle you with digital gimmickry. There are those that promise Nürburgring lap times, even if their most spirited outing is the IKEA carpark. And then there’s the Subaru Forester.

Now in its sixth generation, the Forester isn’t here to trend on TikTok. It’s the automotive equivalent of that one friend who still wears the same fleece from 2002, not because they’re behind the times, but because it still works perfectly.

Built before SUVs were cool

Subaru Forester 2025

Rewind to 1997. The term ‘SUV’ hadn’t yet become the genre-defining buzzword it is today. And yet, the first-generation Forester quietly carved a niche all its own part estate, part SUV, wholly practical. It was boxy, capable, and didn’t care for pretence. It still doesn’t.

And that’s precisely what makes this sixth-generation Forester so endearing. It hasn’t tried to reinvent itself as a fashion-forward urban soft-roader. Instead, it continues to serve adventure-seekers with unwavering dedication. AWD is standard. Ground clearance is a generous 220mm. And visibility? Practically panoramic.

What’s changed?

Subaru Forester 2025

Well, not much, and that’s not a bad thing. Subaru has been careful here. The 2.5-litre flat-four e-Boxer engine still powers all four wheels via a CVT gearbox. The chassis remains largely the same. Even the footprint hasn’t grown much, which is a blessing when navigating tight roads.

Subaru Forester 2025

What is new, though, is the design. Slimmer headlights and cleaner body lines bring a touch more sophistication.

Simple and sensible

Subaru Forester 2025 cabin

Gone are the days of Subaru’s random smorgasbord of plastics and textures. The new cabin is calm, cohesive, and surprisingly modern. The instrument cluster is clear and mercifully free of overdesigned animations.

Subaru Forester 2025 360 camera

There’s wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, a wireless charger, and USB-A and USB-C ports scattered front and back. Climate controls get their own permanent section on the screen, with real buttons for temperature and defrost. Glory be.

That said, the infotainment fonts are a jumbled mess, and the Starlink splash screen could give Elon Musk heart palpitations. But ergonomically, it all works.

Subaru Forester 2025 boot

The 487-litre boot is wide but shallow, thanks to the battery underneath, and there’s no spare tyre. A shame for a car built to explore the uncharted path.

e-Boxer: mild on power, milder on hybrid

Despite the flashy ‘e-Boxer’ badge, don’t expect any plug-in wizardry here. This is a hybrid at best, with an electric motor more akin to a helpful assistant than a co-pilot.

The century sprint is a leisurely 9.4 seconds. It’s not going to win any drag races at traffic lights, but the ride is smooth, the engine refined, and the CVT surprisingly bearable if you’re not trying to wring its neck.

Subaru Forester 2025 front seats
Subaru Forester 2025 rear seats

Real-world fuel economy hovers around 8.0L/100km, which is stellar given the weight, drivetrain, and size of the Forester.

Still drives like a Subaru

Subaru Forester 2025

There’s an honesty to the way the Forester handles itself. The steering is light but confident, body control is well managed, and the car seems to enjoy carving through corners far more than its spec sheet would suggest.

Yes, it’s slow. But once you’ve built up some speed, it holds momentum like a stubborn Labrador dragging its owner through the park. There’s traction for days, and with Subaru’s symmetrical all-wheel drive, it’ll laugh in the face of muddy trails and gravel paths.

Subaru’s EyeSight system is one of the more comprehensive safety suites out there. Adaptive cruise control with lane centring works well, and there are 360-degree cameras to aid with parking this boxy brute.

But the driver-monitoring system is… enthusiastic. On our test, driving into the sun with a squint apparently triggered a sleep warning. It screamed, flashed lights, and demanded our attention. It can be disabled, but it’s buried in a menu maze.

Built for the long haul, not the fast lane

Subaru Forester 2025

The Subaru Forester e-Boxer is for people who want a practical, honest, go-anywhere machine that won’t quit halfway through the journey. It may not be as fast, but it’ll get you and your gear, dogs, or kids wherever you need to go.

It’s the sort of car that earns your respect over time, like a well-worn pair of hiking boots or your dad’s trusty Swiss Army knife. Dependable. Loyal. And with just enough quirks to keep things interesting.

The Forester dares to be old-school. And frankly, we need more cars like it.

Technical Specifications

Subaru Forester e-Boxer Hybrid

Engine: 2.5-litre inline 4
Drivetrain: All-Wheel Drive
Power: 194 bhp
Torque: 209 Nm
Gearbox: Hybrid Lineartronic CVT
0-100km/h: 9.4 seconds (claimed)
Top Speed: 182 km/h
Fuel Tank Capacity: 63 litres 
Fuel Economy: 16.9 km/litre (claimed)
Price: S$219,800 with COE (accurate at the time of this article)

Photo Credits: Sean Loo (@auto.driven)


Read more automotive news at AutoApp, or check out our latest videos on YouTube and on TikTok!

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Mercedes-Benz Presents “Engineered for Impact” At GREEN-HOUSE 2025 https://www.autoapp.sg/dev/?p=284218 Mon, 10 Nov 2025 10:27:39 +0000 https://www.autoapp.sg/?p=284218 Singapore’s first and largest sustainability-led retail festival (GREEN-HOUSE) returned on 8–9 November 2025 for its fourth and most ambitious edition yet, with Mercedes-Benz presenting an immersive showcase that redefines innovation through purpose.


Across two days, GREEN-HOUSE 2025 brought together over 80 partners and brands, nine immersive zones and more than 40 free workshops and activities.

A headline showcase by Mercedes-Benz unveiled the brand’s first-ever life-sized 3D-printed G-Class, created from 40,531 discarded PET bottles (580kg of recycled plastic) by Hong Kong studio Editecture.

Mercedes-Benz Presents “Engineered for Impact” At GREEN-HOUSE 2025

Titled “Living Form, Lasting Purpose”, the showcase threads sustainability through the lens of luxury. Under the evolving theme “Engineered for Impact”, this year’s activation leans harder into outcomes: what actually changes when design, technology and responsibility share the same brief?

“At Mercedes-Benz, excitement is about purpose. GREEN-HOUSE 2025 is where we come together with the community to show how luxury can evolve responsibly. Through regenerative design and collaborations with like-minded partners, we’re driving the future. Together, we are crafting iconic experiences that honour innovation, sustainability and the people who make it possible.”

Darren Ng, Head of Customer Excitement, Mercedes-Benz Singapore

The brand’s presence unfolds across three key touchpoints:

Living Form, Lasting Purpose

Mercedes-Benz Presents “Engineered for Impact” At GREEN-HOUSE 2025

In collaboration with Editecture, the newly launched electric G-Class is reimagined as a life-sized silhouette built from 40,531 discarded plastic bottles.

From afar, it reads as an homage to a design icon journeying into its electric future. Step closer, and the illusion shifts: the “car” reveals itself as a modular system of chairs, shelves and lamps engineered for strength, easy disassembly and repeated reuse.

From Hand to Coral

Mercedes-Benz Presents “Engineered for Impact” At GREEN-HOUSE 2025

Crafted with local design studio WASTD, each BYO bottle holder is made from discarded plastic bottles collected in Singapore and transformed into a durable, refined accessory.

Personalised initials turn every holder into a small emblem of responsibility. With 100% of proceeds directed to the Garden City Fund’s 100K Corals Initiative, each piece carries a ripple effect from hand to reef.

What It Takes to Evolve

Mercedes-Benz Presents “Engineered for Impact” At GREEN-HOUSE 2025

Hosted by radio personality Rosalyn Lee, a short film traces the journey from plastic waste to purposeful design, from beaches to classrooms and design studios to city hubs.

Along the way, Rozz meets changemakers working alongside Mercedes-Benz to reimagine the future of plastic, making the case that real evolution begins when communities act in concert rather than isolation.


Read more automotive news at AutoApp, or check out our latest videos on YouTube and on TikTok!

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ChargedUp@SG 2.0 Turns SMU Into Singapore’s Living EV Test-bed https://www.autoapp.sg/dev/?p=284187 Sun, 09 Nov 2025 04:29:07 +0000 https://www.autoapp.sg/?p=284187 For four days in November, Singapore Management University’s campus became an open-air laboratory for electric mobility with ChargedUp@SG.


Billed as “bigger and more comprehensive” than its launch edition in April, this year’s ChargedUp@SG stretched from 6 to 9 November 2025, with SMU Hall at the heart of the action and the rest of the campus pressed into duty as exhibition space, test-drive routes and a festival ground.

The event was deliberately built as a bridge: from ecosystem talk to on-the-ground adoption, from boardroom strategy to how you actually plug a van in at the end of a long delivery shift.

The ChargedUp@SG 2.0 Conference drew a regional line-up of speakers from charge-point operators, technology providers, financiers and policymakers. Names like Charge+, Huawei, PowerUp, Schneider Electric and the SMBC-Aravest Infrastructure Fund took to the stage to tackle the deceptively simple question: how do we scale EV adoption in Southeast Asia without breaking the grid or the bank?

There was plenty of talk about regulation and financing too. After all, you can design the most elegant charging solution in the world, but if the business model does not stack up for operators and landlords, it will never progress beyond a pretty slide deck.

And hovering over every panel was Singapore’s own commitment: to phase out internal-combustion engine cars by 2040 and achieve net-zero emissions by 2050.

From 6 to 9 November, the campus also hosted a public-facing EV showcase, with passenger and commercial EVs displayed and made available for test drives. Families, fleet buyers and the merely curious all had the chance to sit in, poke around and, crucially, drive. For many, it was their first time feeling instant torque rather than hearing an engine rev.

If the inaugural ChargedUp@SG earlier this year proved there was appetite with several thousand attendees and fully booked test-drive slots, this second edition doubled down on making EVs feel less exotic and more everyday.

Across its conference, exhibition, site tours and public showcase, ChargedUp@SG 2.0 stayed faithful to its stated ambition: to act as a catalyst, not merely a calendar entry.

It gathered the right mix of people, technologies and ideas in a single, highly walkable space, and forced them to talk, debate and occasionally disagree, all within sight of actual vehicles and chargers.


Read more automotive news at AutoApp, or check out our latest videos on YouTube and on TikTok!

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Mercedes-AMG GLB 35 Review https://www.autoapp.sg/dev/?p=284088 Sat, 08 Nov 2025 16:36:16 +0000 https://www.autoapp.sg/?p=284088 The Mercedes-AMG GLB 35 is the seven-seat SUV nobody asked for, but we’re so glad it exists.


There are cars that make you feel sensible, cars that make you feel smug, and then there are cars like the Mercedes-AMG GLB 35. A curious concoction that makes you wonder if the engineers at Affalterbach were a little tipsy when they gave it the green light.

Mercedes-AMG GLB 35

The GLB 35 on first glance looks like it’s wearing a suit two sizes too big. Tall, boxy, and unapologetically upright, it resembles a school bus that stumbled into a tuning shop. But underneath all that squared-off practicality lies a heart that beats with all the aggression of a caffeinated gym bro.

Power Meets Practicality

Mercedes-AMG GLB 35 engine

This isn’t some sticker pack with sporty pretensions. The GLB 35 has been given the full AMG once-over. It shares its turbocharged 2.0-litre four-cylinder engine with the A35, which means a healthy 302bhp, an 8-speed dual-clutch transmission, and 4MATIC all-wheel drive that can chuck 50 per cent of power to the rear when things get frisky.

Zero to 100km/h? 5.5 seconds. Fuel economy? Forget about it. This is a seven-seater SUV with the performance stats of a proper hot hatch. Bonkers.

In Comfort and Normal modes, the GLB 35 feels brisk enough, but flick it into Sport+ and it ditches its German stoicism for something far more theatrical. The throttle sharpens, the exhaust barks, and suddenly you’re being jostled by your own organs.

Yes, Sport+ is ridiculous. Yes, it firms up the dampers to the point of chiropractic intervention. But it’s also addictive. So much so that I ended up setting up an Individual mode with snow-optimised power settings and comfort suspension just to restore some sanity after a spirited B-road jaunt.

The Madness Is The Point

Mercedes-AMG GLB 35

Step out of the car to get your organs reorganised, and you wonder how the GLB 35 can even work in the first place. It’s tall stance and 1.8-tonne kerb weight mean it was never destined for racetracks. And yet, once you’re behind the wheel, flicking through gears with a grin on your face, it all makes sense. Sort of.

It’s agile for what it is. Lithe, even. On tighter roads, you’ll find yourself pushing harder than you’d expect in something with room for seven souls and their assorted pets. But they may not appreciate your newfound enthusiasm. Expect groans, moans, and the occasional airborne child.

AMG Trimmings, All Present and Accounted For

Mercedes-AMG GLB 35 rims
Mercedes-AMG GLB 35 cabin

To justify its AMG moniker, the GLB 35 is kitted out like a rock star on tour. 20-inch alloys, adaptive dampers, LED headlights, a Burmester sound system, panoramic sunroof, and the AMG Night Package, which blacks out the chrome in favour of a more menacing motif.

Mercedes-AMG GLB 35

The pièce de résistance is the Panamericana grille vertical slats that pay homage to Mercedes’ 1950s racing heritage. It’s a striking look that gives the GLB the swagger it needs to wear its AMG badge with pride.

Room for Seven (ish)

Mercedes-AMG GLB 35 second row
Mercedes-AMG GLB 35 third row

Technically, yes, this is a seven-seater. Realistically, the last two seats are best left to the nimble, the small, or the vertically challenged. That said, cabin space is generous, and with the rear row folded, you’ll get 565 litres of boot space, perfect for IKEA hauls or emergency diaper stockpiles.

Mercedes-AMG GLB 35 boot space

With all seats down, cargo capacity jumps to 1,800 litres. That’s enough to carry your regrets after signing the finance papers.

Rationality? That’s for Other People

Mercedes-AMG GLB 35

It’s frankly absurd that a seven-seat SUV can sprint like a hot hatch and guzzle fuel like it’s 2006.

This car doesn’t exist for the spreadsheet types. It’s not for the people who count every penny or those who shop with calculators in hand. This is a car for the irrational, the impetuous, the ones who want to carry seven people and blow past a Golf GTI on the way to their children’s piano recital.

It’s not a car you need. But it’s a car you’ll want even if your wallet says otherwise.

Technical Specifications

Mercedes-AMG GLB 35

Engine: 2-litre inline 4
Drivetrain: All-Wheel Drive
Power: 302 bhp
Torque: 400 Nm
Gearbox: 8G-DCT AMG Speedshift
0-100km/h: 5.5 seconds (claimed)
Top Speed: 250 km/h
Fuel Tank Capacity: 60 litres 
Fuel Economy: 10.5 km/litre (claimed)
Price: S$383,888 with COE (accurate at the time of this article)

Photo Credits: Sean Loo (@auto.driven)


Read more automotive news at AutoApp, or check out our latest videos on YouTube and on TikTok!

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Enjoy An Extended Test Drive Experience With Tesla ‘Drive To Believe’ Campaign https://www.autoapp.sg/dev/?p=284151 Thu, 06 Nov 2025 18:13:37 +0000 https://www.autoapp.sg/?p=284151 There’s a particular moment, somewhere between gliding out of a carpark and merging onto the expressway, when an electric car either wins you over or it doesn’t. With Tesla, that moment tends to arrive sooner than expected.


The brand’s ‘Drive To Believe’ campaign invites you to find that moment for yourself: book a test drive of a Model 3 or Model Y in Singapore and stand a chance to enjoy the car for three days and two nights*.

Just you, your routine, and a quietly astonishing EV that turns everyday drives into something rather special.

Tesla ‘Drive To Believe’ test drive campaign

Slick brochures and spec sheets are fine, but they don’t tell you how instant torque feels when you thread into evening traffic, or how soothing it is when a car simply works.

“Drive To Believe” is a hands-on trial by real life: school runs, late dinners, rainstorms, you name it. If a car can impress you on a Tuesday night in your home carpark, it can impress you anywhere.

How to win that 3D2N drive

Tesla ‘Drive To Believe’ test drive campaign
  1. Register for a Tesla test drive in Singapore.
  2. Experience a guided session with a Tesla Advisor; familiarise with the interface, charging, and everyday usability.
  3. Once you’ve completed your test drive, you’ll stand a chance to be selected for a complimentary 3 days, 2 nights with a Tesla Model 3 or Model Y.

The numbers that make sense

Tesla ‘Drive To Believe’ test drive campaign

In a city that rewards efficiency and prudence, the sums are compelling. Eligible buyers can enjoy an attractive 1.50% p.a. financing offer**, keeping monthly payments manageable. There’s also Singapore’s S$5,000 EV adoption incentive, easing your step into clean mobility. All these allows you to drive away your Tesla from as low as $1,610.month***.

With charging rates that charge your Tesla from up to 311km in 15 mins, prices starting at $0.44/kWh. Combine this with maintenance savings over time, and you begin to see why so many drivers describe the switch to Tesla as both an upgrade and a relief.

Where to meet your future EV

Tesla ‘Drive To Believe’ test drive campaign

Drop by any of Tesla’s Experience Centres in Singapore to start your journey:

  1. 17 Lorong 8 Toa Payoh
  2. Millenia Walk, #01-84
  3. Westgate, #01-01

Explore the cars, ask the tricky questions, and book your test drive on the spot. The team will happily demystify charging, costs, and ownership.

Ready to Drive To Believe? Book your test drive online or in person at Westgate, Toa Payoh, or Millenia Walk today, and let the car do the convincing. By Monday morning, you won’t be asking if an EV fits your life. You’ll be deciding which colour suits it best.


*3D2N drive selection mechanics, dates, and availability are managed by Tesla Singapore. Terms and conditions apply.

**1.50% interest rate and incentives are subject to eligibility, bank approval, and prevailing regulations.

***Based on the estimated walkaway price, valid till 18 November 2025. Contact Tesla to find out more.

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Performance Motors Reignites The Motorsport Spark At Salzburgring https://www.autoapp.sg/dev/?p=284016 Wed, 05 Nov 2025 08:29:51 +0000 https://www.autoapp.sg/?p=284016 Performance Motors Limited (PML) whisked a group of BMW owners from Munich to Salzburg for the PML BMW M Experience.


The journey opened at BMW Welt and the BMW Museum. Participants were personally welcomed by Ms Ritu Chandy (Senior Vice President) and Mr Sebastian Ahlers (Regional Area Manager, BMW Group, Asia Pacific, Middle East, Eastern Europe and Africa).

“The PML BMW M Experience is true to our promise that once you become a BMW owner with Performance Motors, you will be entering an exclusive world of exceptional experiences beyond the sale. Whether it is a passion for the drive, a taste for exquisite cuisine, or a love for golf, we are focused on engaging our customers in meaningful ways that reflect their lifestyle interests.”

Mr Lawrence Tan, Managing Director, Performance Motors Limited (PML)

A first look at the Neue Klasse iX3

The customers were also provided an up-close encounter with the fully electric BMW iX3, the first model of the revolutionary Neue Klasse.

Salzburgring shakedown

The highlight of the trip was a shakedown at the 4.2-kilometre Salzburgring. Behind the wheel of the BMW M4 Competition, 13 drivers put precision to the test: timed slalom runs, double-lane changes, and controlled drifts. Each participant left not only faster but sharper, graduating with a BMW M Race Track Training certificate as proof.

Mr Tan added, “When someone chooses BMW, it is often because they have a deep appreciation for its precision, power, and sheer driving pleasure. We (Performance Motors) promise to bring more exciting drive experiences so that our BMW owners can fully indulge this passion, be it an exclusive racetrack adventure in Salzburg or curated convoy road trips to Malaysia.”

When the soundtrack is an S58 at full chat and the classroom is Salzburgring, you don’t mind repeating the lesson.


Read more automotive news at AutoApp, or check out our latest videos on YouTube and on TikTok!

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Hyundai Motor Group Signs MoU With Singapore’s HTX To Advance Mobility, Robotics And Hydrogen Technologies https://www.autoapp.sg/dev/?p=284004 Tue, 04 Nov 2025 12:10:34 +0000 https://www.autoapp.sg/?p=284004 Hyundai Motor Group has inked a tripartite Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Singapore’s Home Team Science and Technology Agency (HTX) to accelerate next-generation mobility solutions tailored for Singapore’s frontline needs.


The first public safety technology demonstration, targeted by the end of 2028, will centre on the Kia PBV (Platform Beyond Vehicle), a modular EV architecture that can be rapidly configured for everything from patrol to rapid response. Why build and maintain countless bespoke vehicles when a single, scalable system can slot in mission-specific modules like Lego bricks?

PBVs promise a common electric backbone onto which purpose-built cabins and equipment can be mounted. Crucially, it dovetails with the Singapore Green Plan 2030 and the nation’s push for all vehicles to run on cleaner energy by 2040.

“Hyundai Motor Group has established a solid foundation for driving public mobility innovation in partnership with the Singaporean government, leveraging our proprietary technologies,” said Ilbum Kim, Executive Vice President and Head of Global Policy Office at Hyundai Motor Group. “Through real-world demonstrations of mobility solutions, we will continue to lead global innovation in future technologies such as robotics and hydrogen.”

“Every partnership we forge is about advancing science and technology to empower the Home Team with better tools and smarter systems. This collaboration with Hyundai Motor Group enables us to push the boundaries of future mobility technologies and bring cutting-edge innovations into real-world Home Team operations, and beyond,” said HTX Chief Executive Chan Tsan. In other words: fewer buzzwords, more boots-on-the-ground benefits.

If you’re wondering “Why Singapore?”, consider the test-bed trifecta: open regulatory posture, deep technical talent and a culture that prizes execution. Since launching HMGICS in 2023, the Group has woven itself into the local ecosystem, turning Singapore into a human-centred smart mobility hub.

Hyundai’s acquisition of Boston Dynamics in 2021 was a signal that the Group sees robots as co-workers in factories today and force multipliers tomorrow. In April, further investments were announced to integrate robotics into manufacturing processes.

On the hydrogen front, the XCIENT Fuel Cell heavy-duty truck has already proven that zero-emissions haulage needn’t be hypothetical. If electric PBVs suit urban duty cycles, hydrogen can shoulder heavier loads and longer routes.

Does it all arrive tomorrow? No. But with a 2028 demonstration in sight and institutional momentum behind it, it’s only a matter of time.


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Mazda powers Greater Journeys At The Singapore FinTech Festival https://www.autoapp.sg/dev/?p=283999 Tue, 04 Nov 2025 11:39:24 +0000 https://www.autoapp.sg/?p=283999 Mazda is proud to announce its partnership with the 10th edition of the Singapore FinTech Festival (SFF) 2025 as the Official Event Car.


Mazda is fielding a fleet of ten vehicles, headlined by the fuel-sipping CX-5 M-Hybrid and the newly muscular CX-80 PHEV.

The Singapore FinTech Festival, organised by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), Global Finance & Technology Network (GFTN) and Constellar, in collaboration with the Association of Banks in Singapore, has spent a decade championing collaboration and meaningful innovation. Mazda’s presence signals a similar philosophy: human-centric design paired with engineering that makes long days feel shorter.

“At Mazda, we believe in creating journeys that matter, combining human-centric design with cutting-edge performance. Together with the SFF community, we are excited to deliver Greater Journeys at this defining moment,” says Mr Chong Kah Wei, Managing Director of Mazda Singapore.

SFF’s corridors are where finance meets frontier tech, where the best ideas are grounded by good execution. Mazda’s brand of engineering has long thrived in that same overlap: elegant solutions, tidy packaging, design that respects the person behind the wheel rather than merely dazzling the spec sheet.


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